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avaer 2 hours ago

That number terrifies me not because it is so high, but because it exists.

What is stopping an entity (corporate, government, or otherwise) from using a prompt to make sweeping decisions about whether people are mentally or otherwise "fit" for something based on AI usage? Clearly not the technology.

I'm not saying mental health problems don't exist, but using AI to compute it freaks me out.

elevation an hour ago | parent | next [-]

A rational lender increases interest rates when prospective borrowers are less likely to be around to pay the bill. Confiding in an LLM that is integrated with a consumer tracking apparatus is a great way to ruin your life.

autoexec 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

We could already use social media posts to detect mental illness, by admission as people talk openly about their diagnosis, but also by analysis of the content/tone/frequency of their posts that don't mention mental illness.

Data brokers already compile lists of people with mental illness so that they can be targeted by advertisers and anyone else willing to pay. Not only are they targeted, but they can get ads/suggestions/scams pushed at them during specific times such as when it looks like they're entering a manic phase, or when it's more likely that their meds might be wearing off. Even before chatbots came into the mix, algorithms were already being used to drive us toward a dystopian future.