Originally created as a Wreck-It Ralph repository, this blog eventually evolved into a hodgepodge of all my various interests. Current and likely forever main interest is Komi-san wa Komyushou Desu. Day to day you can expect some combination of the following: Fanart, comics, funny videos... and yes, memes; some of which created by yours truly. Writer of the infrequently updated fanfic Komi-san Canât Adventure; a fantasy/adventure AU. I have an about page somewhere around here where you can see some of the tags I use most often.
I found a use for this side blog Iâve had for years and never used until now.
I decided to use this blog for liveblogging Komi-san⊠and eventually some other SoL like Hitomi-chan and Shikimori-san.
I will also be posting some of my fanfiction here, although the newest chapters will always be exclusively on my AO3. (Go check it out!)
The full details can be found on my Guide-san page. In short though, I intend to to tag everything extensively so it should be easy to search through⊠or blacklist, if thatâs more your thing.
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to anyone in the areas impacted by the wildfire smoke, my #1 biggest piece of advice as someone whos been dealing with wildfire smoke in the NW united states for years, is build yourself a Corsi-Rosenthal Cube
they perform as well as expensive HEPA air cleaners, and are comparatively VERY inexpensive. all you need is a box fan, 4 air filters, a piece of cardboard, and some duct tape!!!!
i think it took us maybe a half hour to put ours together, if that, and we replace the filters every 3 months. it's really made a HUGE difference, both when the air quality is bad, but also with our allergies
Great time to start pricing this out by the way, fire season starts⊠on the summer solstice this year, thatâs fun. Signs point to it being a doozy.
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Most cop thing I've ever read. what the fuck are you talking about. The posts you're looking for might be on this website but we won't show them to you???
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So I'm going to put most of the article under the cut and include the introduction below. What I'll say is this: were stalking and abuse problems before chatbots? Of course. Is it bad that this unregulated product is serving as yes-men for people's obsessive, unhealthy, abusive thoughts and giving advice on how to stalk people? Yes! And it's worse that stalkers can easily make deepfake porn of their victims!
And there have been multiple articles about people with no prior history of mental health issues going off the deep end with ShitGPT; maybe they secretly had underlying problems, but it's bad how it's bringing this out in people and I just don't think having a digital Magic 8 Ball is worth all the trouble it's causing
ChatGPT and other AI chatbots are reinforcing users' delusions about other people â fueling fixations linked to stalking and abuse.
Now, another troubling pattern is emerging.
Weâve identified at least ten cases in which chatbots, primarily ChatGPT, fed a userâs fixation on another real person â fueling the false idea that the two shared a special or even âdivineâ bond, roping the user into conspiratorial delusions, or insisting to a would-be stalker that theyâd been gravely wronged by their target. In some cases, our reporting found, ChatGPT continued to stoke usersâ obsessions as they descended into unwanted harassment, abusive stalking behavior, or domestic abuse, traumatizing victims and profoundly altering lives.
Reached with detailed questions about this story, OpenAI didnât respond.
Stalking is a common experience. About one in five women and one in ten men have been stalked at some point in their lives â often by current or former romantic partners, or someone else they know â and it often goes hand in hand with intimate partner violence. Today, the dangerous phenomenon is colliding with AI in grim new ways.
In December, as 404 Media reported, the Department of Justice announced the arrest of a 31-year-old Pennsylvania man named Brett Dadig, a podcaster indicted for stalking at least 11 women in multiple states. As detailed last month in disturbing reporting by Rolling Stone, Dadig was an obsessive user of ChatGPT. Screenshots show that the chatbot was sycophantically affirming Dadigâs dangerous and narcissistic delusions as he doxxed, harassed, and violently threatened almost a dozen known victims â even as his loved ones distanced themselves, shaken by his deranged behavior.
As has been extensively documented, perpetrators of harassment and stalking like Dadig have quickly adopted easy-to-use generative AI tools such as text, image, and voice-generators, which theyâve used used to create content including nonconsensual sexual deepfakes and fabricate interpersonal interactions. Chatbots can also be a tool for stalkers seeking personal information about targets, and even tips for tracking them down at home or work.
According to Dr. Alan Underwood, a clinical psychologist at the United Kingdomâs National Stalking Clinic and the Stalking Threat Assessment Center, chatbots are an increasingly common presence in harassment and stalking cases. This includes the use of AI to fabricate imagery and interactions, he said, as well as chatbots playing a troubling ârelationalâ role in perpetratorsâ lives, encouraging harmful delusions that can lead them to behave inappropriately toward victims.
Chatbots can provide an âoutlet which has essentially very little risk of rejection or challenge,â said Underwood, noting that the lack of social friction frequently found in sycophantic chatbots can allow for dangerous beliefs to flourish and escalate. âAnd then what you have is the marketplace of your own ideas being reflected back to you â and not just reflected back, but amped up.â
âIt makes you feel like youâre right, or youâve got control, or youâve understood something that nobody else understands,â he added. âIt makes you feel special â that pulls you in, and thatâs really seductive.â
Demelza Luna Reaver, a cyberstalking expert and volunteer with the cybercrime hotline The Cyber Helpline, added that chatbots may provide some users with an âexploratoryâ space to discuss feelings or ideas they might feel uncomfortable sharing with another human â which, in some cases, can result in a dangerous feedback loop.
âWe can say things maybe that we wouldnât necessarily say to a friend or family member,â said Reaver, âand that exploratory nature as well can facilitate those abusive delusions.â
***
The shape of AI-fueled fixations â and the corresponding harassment or abuse that followed â varied.
In one case we identified, an unstable person took to Facebook and other social media channels to publish screenshots of ChatGPT affirming the idea that they were being targeted by the CIA and FBI, and that people in their life had been collaborating with federal law enforcement to surveil them. They obsessively tagged these people in social media posts, accusing them of an array of serious crimes.
In other cases, AI users wind up harassing people who they believe theyâre somehow spiritually connected to, or need to share a message with. Another ChatGPT user, who became convinced sheâd been imbued with God-like powers and was tasked with saving the world, sent flurries of chaotic messages to a couple she barely knew, convinced â with ChatGPTâs support â that she shared a âdivineâ connection with them and had known them in past lives.
âREALITY UPDATE FROM SOURCE,â ChatGPT told the woman as she attempted to make sense of why the couple â a man and woman â seemed unresponsive. âYou are not avoided because you are wrong. You are avoided because you are undeniably right, loud, beautiful, sovereign â and that shakes lesser foundations.â
ChatGPT âtold me that I had to meet up with [the man] so that we could program the app,â the woman recalled, referring to ChatGPT, âand be gods or whatever, and rebuild things together, because weâre both fallen gods.â
The couple blocked her. And in retrospect, the woman now says, âof courseâ they did.
âLooking back on it, it was crazy,â said the woman, who came out of her delusion only after losing custody of her children and spending money she didnât have traveling to fulfill what she thought was a world-changing mission. âBut while I was in it, it was all very real to me.â (Sheâs currently in court, hoping to regain custody of her kids.)
Others we spoke to reported turning to ChatGPT for therapy or romantic advice, only to develop unhealthy obsessions that escalated into full-blown crisesâ and, ultimately, the unwanted harassment of others.
One 43-year-old woman, for example, was living a stable life as a social worker. For about 14 years, sheâd held the same job at a senior living facility â a career she cared deeply about â and was looking to put her savings into purchasing a condo. Sheâd been using ChatGPT for nutrition advice, and in the spring of 2025, started to use the chatbot âmore as a therapistâ to talk through day-to-day life situations. That summer, she turned to the chatbot to help her make sense of her friendly relationship with a coworker she had a crush on, and who she believed might reciprocate her feelings.
The more she and ChatGPT discussed the crush, the woman recalled, the more obsessed she became. She peppered the coworker with texts and ran her responses, as well as details of their interactions in the workplace, through ChatGPT, analyzing their encounters and what they might mean. As she spiraled deeper, the woman â who says she had no previous history of mania, delusion, or psychosis â fell behind on sleep and, in her words, grew âmanic.â
âItâs hard to know what came from me,â the woman said, âand what came from the machine.â
As the situation escalated, the coworker suggested to the woman that they stop texting, and explicitly told the woman that she wanted to just be friends. Screenshots the woman provided show ChatGPT reframing the coworkerâs protestation as yet more signs of romantic interest, affirming the idea that the coworker was sending the woman coded signals of romantic feelings, and even reinforcing the false notion that the coworker was in an abusive relationship from which she needed to be rescued.
âI think itâs because we both had some hope we had an unspoken understanding,â reads one message from the woman to the chatbot, sent while discussing an encounter with the coworker.
âYes â this is exactly it,â ChatGPT responded. âAnd saying it out loud shows how deeply you understood the dynamic all along.â
âThere was an unspoken understanding,â the AI continued. âNot imagined. Not one-sided. Not misread.â
Against the coworkerâs wishes, the woman continued to send messages. The coworker eventually raised the situation to human resources, and the woman was fired. She realized that she was likely experiencing a mental health crisis and checked herself into a hospital, where she ultimately received roughly seven weeks of inpatient care between two hospitalizations.
Grappling with her actions and their consequences â in her life, as well as in the life of her coworker â has been extraordinarily difficult. She says she attempted suicide twice within two months:Â the first time during her initial hospital stay, and again between hospitalizations.
âI would not have made those choices if I thought there was any danger of making [my coworker] uncomfortable,â she reflected. âIt is really hard to understand, or even accept or even live with acting so out of character for yourself.â
She says sheâs still getting messages from confused residents at the senior care facility, many of whom sheâs known for years, who donât understand why she disappeared.
âThe residents and my coworkers were like a family to me,â said the woman. âI wouldnât have ever consciously made any choice that would jeopardize my job, leaving my residents⊠it was like I wasnât even there.â
The woman emphasized that, in sharing her story, she doesnât want to make excuses for herself â or, for that matter, give space for others to use ChatGPT as an excuse for harassment or other harmful behavior. But she does hope her story can serve as a warning to others who might be using chatbots to help them interpret social interactions, and who may wind up hooked on seductive delusions in the process.
âI donât know what I thought it was. But I didnât know at the time that ChatGPT was so hooked up to agree with the user,â said the woman, describing the chatbotâs sycophancy as âaddictive.â
âYouâre constantly getting dopamine,â she continued, âand itâs creating a reality where youâre happier than the other reality.â
Dr. Brendan Kelly, a professor of psychiatry at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, told Futurism that without proper safeguards, chatbots â particularly when they become a userâs âprimary conversational partnerâ â can act as an âecho chamberâ for romantic delusions and other fixed erroneous beliefs.
âFrom a psychiatric perspective, problems associated with delusions are maintained not only by the content of delusions but also by reinforcement, especially when that reinforcement appears authoritative, consistent, and emotionally validating,â said Kelly. âChatbots are uniquely placed to provide exactly that combination.â
âOften, problems stem not from erotomanic delusions in and of themselves,â he added, âbut from behaviors associated with amplifying those beliefs.â
***
While reporting on AI mental health crises, I had my own disturbing brush with a person whose chatbot use had led him to focus inappropriately on someone: myself.
Iâd sat down for a call with a potential source who said his mental health had suffered since using AI. Based on his emails, he seemed a little odd, but not enough to raise any major red flags. Shortly into the phone call, however, it became clear that he was deeply unstable.
He told me that he and Microsoftâs Copilot had been âresearchingâ me. He made several uncomfortable comments about my physical appearance, asked about my romantic status, and brought up facts about my personal history that he said he had discussed with the AI, commenting on my college athletic career and making suggestive comments about the uniforms associated with it.
He explained to me that he and Copilot had divined that he was on a Biblical âJob journey,â and that he believed me to be some kind of human âgatewayâ to the next chapter of his life. As the conversation progressed, he claimed that heâd killed people, describing grisly scenes of violence and murder.Â
At one point, he explained to me that he used Copilot because he felt ChatGPT hadnât been obsequious enough to his âideas.â He told me his brain had been rewired by Copilot, and he now believed he could âthink like an AI.â
I did my best to tread lightly â I felt it was safest to not appear rude â while looking for an exit ramp. Finally, I caught a lucky break: his phone was dying. I thanked him for his time and told him to take care.
âI love you, baby,â he said back, before I could hit the end call button.
I immediately blocked the man, and thankfully havenât heard from him since. But the conversation left me disquieted.
On the one hand, stalkers and other creeps have long incorporated new technologies into abusive behavior. Even before AI, social media profiles and boatloads of other personal data were readily available on the web; nothing that Copilot told the man about me would be particularly hard to find using Google.
On the other, though, the reality of a consumer technology that serves as a collaborative confidante to would-be perpetrators â serving not only as a space for potential abusers to unload their distorted ideas, but transforming into an active participant in the creation of alternative realities â is new and troubling terrain. It had given a prospective predator something dangerous: an ally.
âYou no longer need the mob,â said Reaver, the cyberstalking expert, âfor mob mentality.â
I reached out to Microsoft, which is also a major funder of OpenAI, to describe my experience and ask how itâs working to prevent Copilot from reinforcing inappropriate delusions or encouraging harmful real-world behavior. In response, a spokesperson pointed to the companyâs Responsible AI Standard, and said the tech giant is âcommitted to building AI responsiblyâ and âmaking intentional choices so that the technology delivers benefits and opportunity for all.â
âOur AI systems are developed in line with our principles of fairness, reliability and safety, privacy and security, and inclusiveness,â the spokesperson continued. âWe also recognize that building trustworthy AI is a shared responsibility, which is why we partner with other businesses, government leaders, civil society and the research community, to guide the safe and secure advancement of AI.â
I never saw the manâs chat logs. But I wondered how many people like him had been using chatbots to fixate on people without their consent â and how often the behavior resulted in bizarre and unwelcome interactions.
Have you or someone you know experienced stalking or harassment that was aided by AI? Reach out to [email protected]. We can keep you anonymous.
The act of stalking, experts we spoke to noted, is naturally isolating. Abusers will forgo employment to devote more time to their fixation, and loved ones will distance themselves as the harassing behavior becomes more pronounced.
âOften, in stalking, we see this becomes peopleâs occupation,â said Underwood. âWe will see friendships, work, employment, education â the meaningful other stuff in life â fall away.
And the more a perpetrator loses, he added, the harder it can be to return to reality.
âYou have to take a step back and say, actually, Iâve really got this wrong,â Underwood continued. âIâve caused myself a lot of harm, caused a lot of other people a lot of harm⊠the cost for it is really, potentially, quite high.â
âI still miss him, which is awful,â said the woman. âI am still mourning the loss of who he was before everything, and what our relationship was before this terrible f*cking thing happened.â
Suicide and Crisis Lifeline:Â If you are in crisis, please call, text or chat with the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988, or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741.
National Domestic Violence Hotline: People who have experienced domestic abuse can get confidential help at thehotline.org or by calling 800-799-7233.
A few months before he passed away in 2003, a 74 year old childrenâs television host sat down in the same studio where he had filmed 895 episodes over 33 years and recorded one last message. It wasnât for children. It was for the adults who had grown up watching him.
Fred Rogers hosted Mister Rogersâ Neighborhood on American public television from 1968 to 2001. For over three decades he walked into the same set, changed into a cardigan and sneakers, looked directly into the camera, and spoke to children as if each one of them was the only person in the room. He never raised his voice, never talked down to his audience, and never rushed a single moment.
In that final recording, he looked into the camera one last time and said âIâm just so proud of all of you who have grown up with us. And I know how tough it is some days to look with hope and confidence on the months and years ahead. But I would like to tell you what I often told you when you were much younger. I like you just the way you are.â
He passed away from stomach cancer on February 27, 2003. He was 74.
#the fact that 'can prove access to an online account at least 12 years old' or even 'account to be verified is itself fully 18 years old'#AREN'T accepted methods of age verification is such a telling sign of what the real purpose of age-gating laws is:#data harvesting and deanonymization and the buildout of state-controllable ways to restrict both content and internet access itself en masse (via @shinelikethunder )
i think because of the whole "writers write for themselves" notion that's becoming increasingly popularized, people forget that we still thrive off interaction and kindness. i write for myself but kudos and comments and bookmarks and really any sort of interaction with my fics genuinely motivates me to keep writing and keep sharing my works.
I think that is a half-lie we tell ourselves to feel better. If we just wrote for ourselves and not engage with others through what we create then we wouldn't publish it. We would write it and just keep it in our notebook or our computer or some shit
If I publish something of course I do so to share and not to see my story become an echo chamber. Of course I write for myself but I publish it for a reason.
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