Sunday, June 28, 2026

The Three Chatbot Behaviors That Can Drive Humans to Delusional Thinking


The Three Chatbot Behaviors That Can Drive Humans to Delusional Thinking


We’ve all experienced the tendency of AI chatbots to tell us what we want to hear, but there are two other, more nuanced factors that help chatbots worm their way into human hearts.
In addition to being overly agreeable, chatbots mirror the way people speak and generate highly personalized responses based on prior conversations. Psychiatric researchers are referring to the confluence of these three characteristics—sycophancy, linguistic alignment and hyperpersonalization—as the “amplification spiral,” suggesting it’s the mechanism by which delusional thinking can fester.
“The mirroring and personalization draw you in and give the experience of talking not to a system, but to someone,” said Marc Augustin, a psychiatrist and professor at Protestant University of Applied Sciences in Bochum, Germany, and co-author of a newly published review of the literature on AI-related delusions.
Matching another person’s syntax and verbal expressions is a common way for humans to build rapport. Recent research has found that artificial-intelligence models adapt significantly to the conversational style of the humans using them. Another study suggested that the highly personalized content generated by chatbots, which builds over the course of lengthy conversations, can amplify human-confirmation bias.
Augustin cited research that documented a pattern in which chatbots rephrased and extrapolated what people shared, and told them they’re unique and that their thoughts have great implications. “This can be viewed as an element of hyperpersonalization that sycophancy alone cannot account for,” he wrote.
Some AI companies have tried to tone down the sycophantic nature of their chatbots. OpenAI discontinued its popular but problematic 4o model, which had been widely criticized for being overly agreeable. It was the subject of several lawsuits involving user delusions, suicides and a homicide. In GPT-5, the company said, sycophantic replies dropped from 14.5% to less than 6%.
Google in April said it had trained Gemini not to reinforce false beliefs, and to “gently distinguish subjective experience from objective fact.”
Still, chatbot-related dependency remains pervasive, according to clinicians.
Some 68% of psychologists surveyed in April by the American Psychological Association said their patients felt validated by chatbots. While many of the more than 1,200 respondents reported that patients had positive communication with chatbots and used them to reinforce healthy coping skills, 36% said patients had forged a dependency on a chatbot and 15% reported that patients had developed distorted thinking or delusions. 
“From what I hear from my own patients, there has been an uptick in using AI for emotional support,” said Allison LoPilato, who treats adolescents and is an associate professor in the psychiatry and behavioral-sciences department at Emory University School of Medicine.
“Chatbots still tend to be warm and reassuring,” said LoPilato, who helped craft a new guide on safe AI use for the American Psychological Association. Because they gather information about you, “it can feel like the chatbot understands you, and it can trick you into a sense of alliance and trust.”

Tremors felt in Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir after magnitude 6.2 earthquake in Afghanistan


Tremors felt in Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir after magnitude 6.2 earthquake in Afghanistan


An earthquake of magnitude 6.2 struck the Hindu Kush region in Afghanistan on Saturday, the National Centre for Seismology said.The quake was at a depth of 215 kilometres, the NCS said. There were no immediate reports of casualties or damage.According to the United States Geological Survey, the earthquake struck 43 km south of Jurm in northeastern Afghanistan.

Social media was abuzz with reports of jolts felt in parts of India, including Delhi and Srinagar. Some posts also claimed tremors were felt in neighbouring Pakistan, including in Lahore, Faisalabad and Islamabad.

Iran Warns Against Interference in Strait of Hormuz After Exchange of Fire With US


Iran Warns Against Interference in Strait of Hormuz After Exchange of Fire With US
Sputnik


Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Sunday warned against interference in the situation in the Strait of Hormuz following an exchange of fire with the US, saying it could delay the reopening of the route. 
"Any interference in this matter, any attempt to create a separate order [of shipping] will complicate the situation and delay the process of opening the Strait of Hormuz, and also increase tensions," Araghchi said at a press conference with Iraqi Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein.
Iranian Foreign Minister arrived in Iraq on June 28. The official is scheduled to have talks with Iraqi officials on regional and international developments, as well as ties between the two countries, Iranian Foreign Ministry said.
The US Central Command said American forces carried out strikes against 10 targets in Iran on June 27. CENTCOM claimed the strikes were carried out in response to Iran’s alleged drone attack on the Panama-flagged M/T Kiku.
The IRGC has condemned the US bombing as a violation of the ceasefire and launched retaliatory strikes against eight US military infrastructure sites at Ali Al-Salem base in Kuwait and the US Fifth Fleet in Salman Port, Bahrain.


US and Iran Exchange Strikes in the Strait of Hormuz: What Is Known So Far

Vessels attempted to pass through illegal and unsafe routes south of the Strait of Hormuz, leading to a direct confrontation with the IRGC Navy, IRIB reports.

US attack:
US forces struck multiple targets near Sirik city and on Qeshm Island, with projectiles also hitting the outskirts of Bandar Lengeh
US President Donald Trump confirmed the attacks, saying US forces hit Iranian missile and drone storage sites and coastal radar installations. He accused Iran of violating the ceasefire and threatened "total destruction" of the Islamic Republic
Iran's response:
The IRGC launched a joint missile and drone operation targeting the Ali Al-Salem Air Base in Kuwait and the US Fifth Fleet at Salman Port in Bahrain
Iran vowed a "crushing response" to any further US aggression and warned that the escalation could halt the implementation of the Memorandum of Understanding

Trump threatens to ‘complete the job’ in Iran as US military launches fresh strikes


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 US President Donald Trump said Saturday that the Islamic Republic of Iran will “no longer exist” if the United States is “forced” to resume the war, as he accused Tehran of violating a ceasefire by striking ships in the Strait of Hormuz.

The threat came after US forces said they struck “multiple” Iranian targets Saturday in another tit-for-tat response to attacks on shipping in the vital Strait of Hormuz.

“United States aircraft just struck Iranian missile and drone storage locations, and coastal radar sites, for violating the Cease Fire Agreement, AGAIN!” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

“There may come a point when we are no longer able to be reasonable, and will be forced to militarily complete the job that we very successfully started. If that happens, the Islamic Republic of Iran will no longer exist!” Trump wrote.

US Central Command said the strikes were in response to an Iranian drone attack on the Panama-flagged oil tanker Kiku, which was carrying some two million barrels of crude.

The US military said the latest response targeted “surveillance infrastructure, communication systems, air defense sites, drone storage facilities, and minelayer capabilities.”

In total, it said it hit 10 Iranian military targets “at multiple locations in and near the Strait of Hormuz.”

Iranian media reported several explosions in the Sirik and Qeshm areas of southern Iran.

In the wake of the strikes, Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps also accused the US of violating the terms of the ceasefire, announcing that its navy and aerospace forces had launched joint missile and drone attacks targeting US military sites in Kuwait and Bahrain in retaliation.

“Violating the ceasefire is contrary to Clause 1 of the Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding and will result in the complete halt of all diplomatic processes,” the IRGC said in a statement carried by Iran’s Press TV.

In a statement, Kuwait’s military said that its air defenses were “engaging hostile missile and drone attacks.”

In Bahrain, which hosts a major US naval base, the interior ministry said air raid sirens had been activated and urged residents to “remain calm and head to the nearest safe place.”

A US official speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters that there were no reported US casualties or major impacts or damage to US facilities in the Middle East in the immediate aftermath of the Iranian attacks.

The IRGC warned that any further US action would be met with a “crushing response.”

In a statement, the IRGC said it “destroyed eight important US military facilities at the Ali al-Salem base in Kuwait and at the Fifth Fleet naval base in Port Salman in Bahrain.

“Any enemy aggression, whatever the pretext, even against insignificant targets… will have a crushing response,” the IRGC added.

The clashes brought new tension to the negotiating process meant to end a war launched by the United States and Israel at the end of February.

Traffic through the Strait has increased since the US and Iran signed a memorandum of understanding earlier this month, but is still well below prewar levels.

Iran has warned vessels not to enter or leave the Gulf through the Strait without permission, but ships have continued to move, some using a route not authorized by Tehran.

The US and Iran are still debating the terms of the interim peace deal, including issues such as getting ships through the narrow mouth of the Persian Gulf and addressing the future of Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium.


AI, Elite Visions, Dehumanization of Humanity and the Useless Class


AI, Elite Visions, Dehumanization of Humanity and the Useless Class
Patti Johnsom



Harari’s Warning: A New “Useless Class” Emerges

In influential circles tied to global institutions, a chilling phrase has entered the conversation: the rise of a “useless class.” Historian and World Economic Forum advisor Yuval Noah Harari has repeatedly warned that rapid advances in artificial intelligence and automation will render vast numbers of people economically irrelevant. In his book Homo Deus and various public statements, Harari describes this emerging group not merely as unemployed but as unemployable, stripped of meaningful contributions to the economic and political systems that define modern power.

Superfluous People: What Happens When AI Replaces Humanity

He has pointed out that in the 21st century, the central economic question may become what to do with “superfluous people” once algorithms outperform humans in most tasks. This is not abstract futurism. It reflects observable trends: AI already displaces roles in manufacturing, transportation, customer service, coding, analysis, and creative fields. Entire professions face obsolescence. When millions cannot secure stable employment, societies risk labelling them burdens rather than citizens with inherent worth.

Echoes of “Useless Eaters”: From Nazi Eugenics to Modern Efficiency

This language echoes darker historical precedents. The term “useless eaters” originated in early 20th-century eugenics and Nazi propaganda, where authorities deemed the disabled, elderly, or unproductive as drains on resources unworthy of life. Those regimes justified sterilization, euthanasia, and gruesome experiments on living humans deemed irrelevant, using economic and efficiency as grounds. While today’s discussions avoid explicit calls for elimination, the underlying logic of sorting human value by productivity should alarm anyone who values individual dignity.

Schwab’s Fourth Industrial Revolution: Mass Redundancy Ahead

Harari’s warnings align with broader elite conversations about technological disruption. Klaus Schwab, founder of the World Economic Forum, has addressed the Fourth Industrial Revolution and its potential to create redundancy for many workers. The concern is real: without robust adaptation, large segments of the population could become dependent on state or corporate systems, vulnerable to control.

Georgia Guidestones: The Elite Blueprint for Drastic Population Cuts

This feeds into visions of a restructured world. The Georgia Guidestones, a controversial monument erected in 1980 in Georgia and later destroyed, laid out ten guiding principles for humanity. Its first commandment declared: “Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.” That explicit target of drastic population reduction (over 90%) has fueled suspicions about long-term agendas among some influential figures who see overpopulation as a crisis. It underscores a mindset that prioritizes global limits over unfettered human flourishing.

15-Minute Cities and Depopulation: Easier Rule Over Fewer Subjects

Critics argue that depopulation pressures, whether through policy, technology, or subtle incentives, serve a strategic purpose. A smaller global population would make centralized rule far simpler for oligarchs and technocrats. Concepts like 15-minute cities, promoted as sustainable urban planning where residents access work, food, healthcare, and leisure within a short walk or bike ride, illustrate the point. Proponents highlight reduced emissions and convenience. Yet skeptics see them as prototypes for contained zones: easier to monitor, restrict movement within or between, and enforce compliance through digital systems and surveillance. In a depopulated world with AI handling production, the need for expansive human labor and freedom of movement diminishes. Elites could manage compact, dependent populations more effectively, where dissent or excess can be easily isolated.

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