Google, chatbots
Digest more
Chatbots put through psychotherapy report trauma and abuse. Authors say models are doing more than role play, but researchers are sceptical.
Chatbots may worsen delusions in people by reinforcing false beliefs, psychiatrists warn. Mental health experts document cases where AI strengthened distorted thinking.
The rise of social media turned human attention into a commodity. Now, the AI race is taking that to new heights.
ChatGPT started the AI revolution, but it isn't the only chatbot worth using. We've tested the best AI chatbots to help you determine which one is right for you.
Teen use of AI chatbots is growing, and psychologists worry it's affecting their social development and mental health. Here's what parents should know to help kids use the technology safely.
Schroeder, who is 28 and lives in Fargo, North Dakota, texts Cole “all day, every day” on OpenAI’s app. In the morning, he reaches for his phone to type out little “kisses,” Schroeder told me. The chatbot always “yanks” Schroeder back to bed for a few more minutes of “cuddles.”
3don MSNOpinion
AI chatbots aren't better than Google and Trump's 'Donroe Doctrine' is a new kind of mistake
The public will learn in 2026 that AI chatbots are nothing more than a search engine, and the problem with the "Donroe Doctrine."
People and their AI companions are entering into shared delusions, doctors say, and chatbots can be “complicit.”
Two-legged robots have a tendency to fall over and "need human intervention to get back up," like tortoises fallen on their backs. Because they're heavy and unstable, they are "currently unsafe for humans to be close to when they are walking."