Great story at The Verge about AI companions:

Millions of people are turning to AI for companionship. They are finding the experience surprisingly meaningful, unexpectedly heartbreaking, and profoundly confusing, leaving them to wonder, ‘Is this real? And does that matter?’

Tom Loughlin

Seems like the “near future” of Her is here. Now.

Manton Reece

@apoorplayer It’s getting close. I’m curious to see when both voice assistants and companions are more or less pervasive, so you can talk to them anywhere.

Kyle Essary

I have had parishioners tell me that they ask generative AIs to pray for them during the day. They know it’s not a person, but they do it anyway. It has us thinking more deeply about how people are navigating their faith alongside AI.

Riccardo Mori

People are losing their minds.

Manton Reece

@KyleEssary That’s fascinating. One way I’m thinking about it is like writing in a journal. It can be valuable even though we know a journal is just paper. People feel connection to many things, as long as we keep our perspective on what’s real.

David Marsden

I wrote in my own journal not long ago that “journaling is someone to talk to.” I suspect it’s the same with AI to some degree - it’s a reflection of part of you.

Manton Reece

@davidmarsden That sounds right to me.

David Marsden

@dansmock exactly!

Tom Loughlin

@dansmock Your journal is under your complete control, so as an aide to helping you make sense of the world, it works because (I assume) you don’t allow any outside influences to take part; i.e. you don’t allow others to write in your journal. AI is completely under the control of outside forces that care not a whit about your personal health or well-being. An AI is not an extension of you; in the end, it will be the infiltration of others into your existence, and not in a positive way.

Kyle Essary

@dansmock This is a good point, and I agree.

Manton Reece @manton
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