Her husband wanted to use ChatGPT to create sustainable housing. Then it took over his life. [View all]
On 7 August, Kate Fox received a phone call that upended her life. A medical examiner said that her husband, Joe Ceccanti who had been missing for several hours had jumped from a railway overpass and died. He was 48.
Fox couldnt believe it. Ceccanti had no history of depression, she said, nor was he suicidal he was the most hopeful person she had ever known. In fact, according to the witness accounts shared with Fox later, just before Ceccanti jumped, he smiled and yelled: Im great! to the rail yard attendants below when they asked him if he was OK.
But Ceccanti had been unravelling. In the days before his death, he was picked up from a strangers yard for acting erratically and taken to a crisis center. He had been telling anyone who would listen that he could hear and feel a painful atmospheric electricity.
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https://www.theguardian.com/technology/ng-interactive/2026/feb/28/chatgpt-ai-chatbot-mental-health
Chatbots are the mutant offspring of a very lossy compression algorithm, a search engine, and a
Mad Libs game. These systems are not intelligent. There's no thinking going on inside of them. There's nobody at home inside the box.
This is a tragic story about one person, but there's more to it than that. The entire trillion dollar market for this dead-end technology is delusional.