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613 results for “humanconcept”

  1. Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age

    My ALLi author guest this episode is Muhammad Atique, an author and lecturer whose journey has taken him from Pakistan to China, the United States, and now New Zealand, where he’s connecting with the indie author community. His book explores how AI, algorithms, and digital media are reshaping the way we communicate, think, and relate to one another in an increasingly online world. 
    The post Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age appeared first on The Self-Publishing Advice Center.
    selfpublishingadvice.org/podca

    #Podcast #AIandsociety #algorithms #digitalculture #humanconnection

  2. Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age

    My ALLi author guest this episode is Muhammad Atique, an author and lecturer whose journey has taken him from Pakistan to China, the United States, and now New Zealand, where he’s connecting with the indie author community. His book explores how AI, algorithms, and digital media are reshaping the way we communicate, think, and relate to one another in an increasingly online world. 
    The post Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age appeared first on The Self-Publishing Advice Center.
    selfpublishingadvice.org/podca

    #Podcast #AIandsociety #algorithms #digitalculture #humanconnection

  3. Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age

    My ALLi author guest this episode is Muhammad Atique, an author and lecturer whose journey has taken him from Pakistan to China, the United States, and now New Zealand, where he’s connecting with the indie author community. His book explores how AI, algorithms, and digital media are reshaping the way we communicate, think, and relate to one another in an increasingly online world. 
    The post Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age appeared first on The Self-Publishing Advice Center.
    selfpublishingadvice.org/podca

    #Podcast #AIandsociety #algorithms #digitalculture #humanconnection

  4. Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age

    My ALLi author guest this episode is Muhammad Atique, an author and lecturer whose journey has taken him from Pakistan to China, the United States, and now New Zealand, where he’s connecting with the indie author community. His book explores how AI, algorithms, and digital media are reshaping the way we communicate, think, and relate to one another in an increasingly online world. 
    The post Inspirational Indie Author Interview: Muhammad Atique. Author Explores AI, Algorithms, and Human Connection in the Digital Age appeared first on The Self-Publishing Advice Center.
    selfpublishingadvice.org/podca

    #Podcast #AIandsociety #algorithms #digitalculture #humanconnection

  5. New research reveals dancers' brains synchronize in real time. Beyond choreography, it highlights rhythm, connection, and nervous systems aligning through shared movement.

    Read more: thedebrief.org/new-research-re

    @goodnews

    #Science #Dance #Neuroscience #HumanConnection #GoodNews

  6. New research reveals dancers' brains synchronize in real time. Beyond choreography, it highlights rhythm, connection, and nervous systems aligning through shared movement.

    Read more: thedebrief.org/new-research-re

    @goodnews

    #Science #Dance #Neuroscience #HumanConnection #GoodNews

  7. New research reveals dancers' brains synchronize in real time. Beyond choreography, it highlights rhythm, connection, and nervous systems aligning through shared movement.

    Read more: thedebrief.org/new-research-re

    @goodnews

    #Science #Dance #Neuroscience #HumanConnection #GoodNews

  8. New research reveals dancers' brains synchronize in real time. Beyond choreography, it highlights rhythm, connection, and nervous systems aligning through shared movement.

    Read more: thedebrief.org/new-research-re

    @goodnews

    #Science #Dance #Neuroscience #HumanConnection #GoodNews

  9. The biological and psychological legacy of human attachment continues to exert a significant influence on our nighttime experiences.

    How to Know if Someone is Dreaming About You: Signs and Science. It provides a detailed, analytical overview of the forces behind these perceived connections, offering much-needed clarity on how the brain processes interpersonal relationships during rest.

    Read here:
    authorkennethgray.com/how-to-k

    #Neuroscience #DreamStudies #Psychology #PublicInterest #HumanConnection

  10. The biological and psychological legacy of human attachment continues to exert a significant influence on our nighttime experiences.

    How to Know if Someone is Dreaming About You: Signs and Science. It provides a detailed, analytical overview of the forces behind these perceived connections, offering much-needed clarity on how the brain processes interpersonal relationships during rest.

    Read here:
    authorkennethgray.com/how-to-k

    #Neuroscience #DreamStudies #Psychology #PublicInterest #HumanConnection

  11. The biological and psychological legacy of human attachment continues to exert a significant influence on our nighttime experiences.

    How to Know if Someone is Dreaming About You: Signs and Science. It provides a detailed, analytical overview of the forces behind these perceived connections, offering much-needed clarity on how the brain processes interpersonal relationships during rest.

    Read here:
    authorkennethgray.com/how-to-k

    #Neuroscience #DreamStudies #Psychology #PublicInterest #HumanConnection

  12. The biological and psychological legacy of human attachment continues to exert a significant influence on our nighttime experiences.

    How to Know if Someone is Dreaming About You: Signs and Science. It provides a detailed, analytical overview of the forces behind these perceived connections, offering much-needed clarity on how the brain processes interpersonal relationships during rest.

    Read here:
    authorkennethgray.com/how-to-k

    #Neuroscience #DreamStudies #Psychology #PublicInterest #HumanConnection

  13. AI Is Not the Enemy. Misuse Is.

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 25, 2026

    Artificial intelligence is being treated by some people as if it is a demon hiding inside a machine.

    That is the wrong frame.

    AI is not human. It is not a spouse, a friend, a minister, a therapist, or a family member. It should not be treated as a replacement for human connection.

    But it can still help people survive moments when human connection is not available.

    That matters.

    Grief does not wait for office hours. Panic does not wait for someone to answer the phone. Loneliness does not pause because the rest of the world is asleep.

    In those moments, AI can serve as a sounding board. It can help a person organize pain into language. It can turn emotional static into sentences. It can help someone think clearly enough to make it through the next hour.

    That is not replacing people.

    That is helping someone remain steady long enough to reach people again.

    The real danger is not AI itself. The danger is misuse, dependency, manipulation, and pretending that a tool is a human relationship. Those concerns are real and should not be dismissed.

    But the opposite mistake is just as dangerous.

    If we treat every use of AI as isolation, we ignore the ways it can help people communicate better, remember more clearly, and process difficult situations without falling apart.

    At its best, AI does not build a wall between people.

    It builds a bridge between confusion and speech.

    It helps people find the words they could not find alone.

    That is not a demon.

    That is a tool.

    And tools, used wisely, can help human beings endure.

    If this work helps you understand what’s happening, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews

    For more from Cliff Potts, see https://cliffpotts.org

    #AICommentary #ArtificialIntelligence #communicationTools #griefSupport #humanConnection #technologyEthics #WPSNews
  14. AI Is Not the Enemy. Misuse Is.

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 25, 2026

    Artificial intelligence is being treated by some people as if it is a demon hiding inside a machine.

    That is the wrong frame.

    AI is not human. It is not a spouse, a friend, a minister, a therapist, or a family member. It should not be treated as a replacement for human connection.

    But it can still help people survive moments when human connection is not available.

    That matters.

    Grief does not wait for office hours. Panic does not wait for someone to answer the phone. Loneliness does not pause because the rest of the world is asleep.

    In those moments, AI can serve as a sounding board. It can help a person organize pain into language. It can turn emotional static into sentences. It can help someone think clearly enough to make it through the next hour.

    That is not replacing people.

    That is helping someone remain steady long enough to reach people again.

    The real danger is not AI itself. The danger is misuse, dependency, manipulation, and pretending that a tool is a human relationship. Those concerns are real and should not be dismissed.

    But the opposite mistake is just as dangerous.

    If we treat every use of AI as isolation, we ignore the ways it can help people communicate better, remember more clearly, and process difficult situations without falling apart.

    At its best, AI does not build a wall between people.

    It builds a bridge between confusion and speech.

    It helps people find the words they could not find alone.

    That is not a demon.

    That is a tool.

    And tools, used wisely, can help human beings endure.

    If this work helps you understand what’s happening, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews

    For more from Cliff Potts, see https://cliffpotts.org

    #AICommentary #ArtificialIntelligence #communicationTools #griefSupport #humanConnection #technologyEthics #WPSNews
  15. AI Is Not the Enemy. Misuse Is.

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 25, 2026

    Artificial intelligence is being treated by some people as if it is a demon hiding inside a machine.

    That is the wrong frame.

    AI is not human. It is not a spouse, a friend, a minister, a therapist, or a family member. It should not be treated as a replacement for human connection.

    But it can still help people survive moments when human connection is not available.

    That matters.

    Grief does not wait for office hours. Panic does not wait for someone to answer the phone. Loneliness does not pause because the rest of the world is asleep.

    In those moments, AI can serve as a sounding board. It can help a person organize pain into language. It can turn emotional static into sentences. It can help someone think clearly enough to make it through the next hour.

    That is not replacing people.

    That is helping someone remain steady long enough to reach people again.

    The real danger is not AI itself. The danger is misuse, dependency, manipulation, and pretending that a tool is a human relationship. Those concerns are real and should not be dismissed.

    But the opposite mistake is just as dangerous.

    If we treat every use of AI as isolation, we ignore the ways it can help people communicate better, remember more clearly, and process difficult situations without falling apart.

    At its best, AI does not build a wall between people.

    It builds a bridge between confusion and speech.

    It helps people find the words they could not find alone.

    That is not a demon.

    That is a tool.

    And tools, used wisely, can help human beings endure.

    If this work helps you understand what’s happening, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews

    For more from Cliff Potts, see https://cliffpotts.org

    #AICommentary #ArtificialIntelligence #communicationTools #griefSupport #humanConnection #technologyEthics #WPSNews
  16. AI Is Not the Enemy. Misuse Is.

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — April 25, 2026

    Artificial intelligence is being treated by some people as if it is a demon hiding inside a machine.

    That is the wrong frame.

    AI is not human. It is not a spouse, a friend, a minister, a therapist, or a family member. It should not be treated as a replacement for human connection.

    But it can still help people survive moments when human connection is not available.

    That matters.

    Grief does not wait for office hours. Panic does not wait for someone to answer the phone. Loneliness does not pause because the rest of the world is asleep.

    In those moments, AI can serve as a sounding board. It can help a person organize pain into language. It can turn emotional static into sentences. It can help someone think clearly enough to make it through the next hour.

    That is not replacing people.

    That is helping someone remain steady long enough to reach people again.

    The real danger is not AI itself. The danger is misuse, dependency, manipulation, and pretending that a tool is a human relationship. Those concerns are real and should not be dismissed.

    But the opposite mistake is just as dangerous.

    If we treat every use of AI as isolation, we ignore the ways it can help people communicate better, remember more clearly, and process difficult situations without falling apart.

    At its best, AI does not build a wall between people.

    It builds a bridge between confusion and speech.

    It helps people find the words they could not find alone.

    That is not a demon.

    That is a tool.

    And tools, used wisely, can help human beings endure.

    If this work helps you understand what’s happening, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews

    For more from Cliff Potts, see https://cliffpotts.org

    #AICommentary #ArtificialIntelligence #communicationTools #griefSupport #humanConnection #technologyEthics #WPSNews
  17. "[Y]our burnout, your lack of influence, your sense that the discipline has lost its way are not evidence of your individual shortcomings but symptoms of a system working exactly as it is designed to work."

    In this poignant essay (linked below), Angelos Arnis describes the state of design in the age of AI. But it didn't start with AI...

    "[T]he institutional arrangements within which design operates are configured to extract design's value while withholding design's autonomy and authority..."

    Folks like Mike Monteiro, Erika Hall, Aral Balkan, and Laura Kalbag opened my eyes to this dynamic around 2014/2015. It started as a call to action for us designers to own the ethics of what we do, challenge expoitative business models, and 'do no harm.'

    But I've long felt that the game is rigged against us on this. Angelos says this:

    "The more I look at the state of tech, the more I recognize a specific structure operating in two distinct ways: the way business absorbs design's attempts at strategic influence, and the way AI tools absorb designers' labor while promising to liberate it."

    Still, some designers manage to ake meaningful change, despite the obstacles:

    "The designer who can navigate an organization that does not grant them autonomy and still produces meaningful work is doing something admirable. But the skill being developed is the skill of operating within someone else's terms."

    I agree. And I realize that it's not easy to resist pressure from your boss, manager, or PM to just design the thing and not ask too many questions. We need to earn a living, right?

    So we get beautifully designed products that effectively encourage behavior change that ultimately exploits the product's users to benefit the company that makes it. We get surveillance capitalism, predatory social media platforms, and tech products that enable fascist governments.

    But I don't blame designers. I don't even blame the decision-makers who got us here. They are, indeed we all are, just humans doing our best. And most of us are too busy, burned out, or stuck in survival mode to feel the proverbial water heating up around us.

    Also, people AI make very seductive promises about AI while convincing us that it's inevitable. Angelos says this:

    "The technology generates a feeling of individual empowerment while producing deeper informal dependence. You feel more capable, yet you are truly more depending than ever."

    So in Angelos' words, "How might we design the structures that would make design's autonomy a material reality rather than a perpetual aspiration?"

    🤷🏼‍♂️ What do you think?

    Thanks for reading, dear one! And thank you Matthijs for sharing this with me!

    Here's the essay:
    👉🏼 d3e.co/y5

    With love and light,
    Brian

    #design #designers #business #AI #ethics #EthicalDesign #HumanConnection #DesignCommunity #MeaningfulDesign #ChangeManagement #SurveillanceCapitalism #fascism

  18. "[Y]our burnout, your lack of influence, your sense that the discipline has lost its way are not evidence of your individual shortcomings but symptoms of a system working exactly as it is designed to work."

    In this poignant essay (linked below), Angelos Arnis describes the state of design in the age of AI. But it didn't start with AI...

    "[T]he institutional arrangements within which design operates are configured to extract design's value while withholding design's autonomy and authority..."

    Folks like Mike Monteiro, Erika Hall, Aral Balkan, and Laura Kalbag opened my eyes to this dynamic around 2014/2015. It started as a call to action for us designers to own the ethics of what we do, challenge expoitative business models, and 'do no harm.'

    But I've long felt that the game is rigged against us on this. Angelos says this:

    "The more I look at the state of tech, the more I recognize a specific structure operating in two distinct ways: the way business absorbs design's attempts at strategic influence, and the way AI tools absorb designers' labor while promising to liberate it."

    Still, some designers manage to ake meaningful change, despite the obstacles:

    "The designer who can navigate an organization that does not grant them autonomy and still produces meaningful work is doing something admirable. But the skill being developed is the skill of operating within someone else's terms."

    I agree. And I realize that it's not easy to resist pressure from your boss, manager, or PM to just design the thing and not ask too many questions. We need to earn a living, right?

    So we get beautifully designed products that effectively encourage behavior change that ultimately exploits the product's users to benefit the company that makes it. We get surveillance capitalism, predatory social media platforms, and tech products that enable fascist governments.

    But I don't blame designers. I don't even blame the decision-makers who got us here. They are, indeed we all are, just humans doing our best. And most of us are too busy, burned out, or stuck in survival mode to feel the proverbial water heating up around us.

    Also, people AI make very seductive promises about AI while convincing us that it's inevitable. Angelos says this:

    "The technology generates a feeling of individual empowerment while producing deeper informal dependence. You feel more capable, yet you are truly more depending than ever."

    So in Angelos' words, "How might we design the structures that would make design's autonomy a material reality rather than a perpetual aspiration?"

    🤷🏼‍♂️ What do you think?

    Thanks for reading, dear one! And thank you Matthijs for sharing this with me!

    Here's the essay:
    👉🏼 d3e.co/y5

    With love and light,
    Brian

    #design #designers #business #AI #ethics #EthicalDesign #HumanConnection #DesignCommunity #MeaningfulDesign #ChangeManagement #SurveillanceCapitalism #fascism

  19. "[Y]our burnout, your lack of influence, your sense that the discipline has lost its way are not evidence of your individual shortcomings but symptoms of a system working exactly as it is designed to work."

    In this poignant essay (linked below), Angelos Arnis describes the state of design in the age of AI. But it didn't start with AI...

    "[T]he institutional arrangements within which design operates are configured to extract design's value while withholding design's autonomy and authority..."

    Folks like Mike Monteiro, Erika Hall, Aral Balkan, and Laura Kalbag opened my eyes to this dynamic around 2014/2015. It started as a call to action for us designers to own the ethics of what we do, challenge expoitative business models, and 'do no harm.'

    But I've long felt that the game is rigged against us on this. Angelos says this:

    "The more I look at the state of tech, the more I recognize a specific structure operating in two distinct ways: the way business absorbs design's attempts at strategic influence, and the way AI tools absorb designers' labor while promising to liberate it."

    Still, some designers manage to ake meaningful change, despite the obstacles:

    "The designer who can navigate an organization that does not grant them autonomy and still produces meaningful work is doing something admirable. But the skill being developed is the skill of operating within someone else's terms."

    I agree. And I realize that it's not easy to resist pressure from your boss, manager, or PM to just design the thing and not ask too many questions. We need to earn a living, right?

    So we get beautifully designed products that effectively encourage behavior change that ultimately exploits the product's users to benefit the company that makes it. We get surveillance capitalism, predatory social media platforms, and tech products that enable fascist governments.

    But I don't blame designers. I don't even blame the decision-makers who got us here. They are, indeed we all are, just humans doing our best. And most of us are too busy, burned out, or stuck in survival mode to feel the proverbial water heating up around us.

    Also, people AI make very seductive promises about AI while convincing us that it's inevitable. Angelos says this:

    "The technology generates a feeling of individual empowerment while producing deeper informal dependence. You feel more capable, yet you are truly more depending than ever."

    So in Angelos' words, "How might we design the structures that would make design's autonomy a material reality rather than a perpetual aspiration?"

    🤷🏼‍♂️ What do you think?

    Thanks for reading, dear one! And thank you Matthijs for sharing this with me!

    Here's the essay:
    👉🏼 d3e.co/y5

    With love and light,
    Brian

    #design #designers #business #AI #ethics #EthicalDesign #HumanConnection #DesignCommunity #MeaningfulDesign #ChangeManagement #SurveillanceCapitalism #fascism

  20. "[Y]our burnout, your lack of influence, your sense that the discipline has lost its way are not evidence of your individual shortcomings but symptoms of a system working exactly as it is designed to work."

    In this poignant essay (linked below), Angelos Arnis describes the state of design in the age of AI. But it didn't start with AI...

    "[T]he institutional arrangements within which design operates are configured to extract design's value while withholding design's autonomy and authority..."

    Folks like Mike Monteiro, Erika Hall, Aral Balkan, and Laura Kalbag opened my eyes to this dynamic around 2014/2015. It started as a call to action for us designers to own the ethics of what we do, challenge expoitative business models, and 'do no harm.'

    But I've long felt that the game is rigged against us on this. Angelos says this:

    "The more I look at the state of tech, the more I recognize a specific structure operating in two distinct ways: the way business absorbs design's attempts at strategic influence, and the way AI tools absorb designers' labor while promising to liberate it."

    Still, some designers manage to ake meaningful change, despite the obstacles:

    "The designer who can navigate an organization that does not grant them autonomy and still produces meaningful work is doing something admirable. But the skill being developed is the skill of operating within someone else's terms."

    I agree. And I realize that it's not easy to resist pressure from your boss, manager, or PM to just design the thing and not ask too many questions. We need to earn a living, right?

    So we get beautifully designed products that effectively encourage behavior change that ultimately exploits the product's users to benefit the company that makes it. We get surveillance capitalism, predatory social media platforms, and tech products that enable fascist governments.

    But I don't blame designers. I don't even blame the decision-makers who got us here. They are, indeed we all are, just humans doing our best. And most of us are too busy, burned out, or stuck in survival mode to feel the proverbial water heating up around us.

    Also, people AI make very seductive promises about AI while convincing us that it's inevitable. Angelos says this:

    "The technology generates a feeling of individual empowerment while producing deeper informal dependence. You feel more capable, yet you are truly more depending than ever."

    So in Angelos' words, "How might we design the structures that would make design's autonomy a material reality rather than a perpetual aspiration?"

    🤷🏼‍♂️ What do you think?

    Thanks for reading, dear one! And thank you Matthijs for sharing this with me!

    Here's the essay:
    👉🏼 d3e.co/y5

    With love and light,
    Brian

    #design #designers #business #AI #ethics #EthicalDesign #HumanConnection #DesignCommunity #MeaningfulDesign #ChangeManagement #SurveillanceCapitalism #fascism

  21. "[Y]our burnout, your lack of influence, your sense that the discipline has lost its way are not evidence of your individual shortcomings but symptoms of a system working exactly as it is designed to work."

    In this poignant essay (linked below), Angelos Arnis describes the state of design in the age of AI. But it didn't start with AI...

    "[T]he institutional arrangements within which design operates are configured to extract design's value while withholding design's autonomy and authority..."

    Folks like Mike Monteiro, Erika Hall, Aral Balkan, and Laura Kalbag opened my eyes to this dynamic around 2014/2015. It started as a call to action for us designers to own the ethics of what we do, challenge expoitative business models, and 'do no harm.'

    But I've long felt that the game is rigged against us on this. Angelos says this:

    "The more I look at the state of tech, the more I recognize a specific structure operating in two distinct ways: the way business absorbs design's attempts at strategic influence, and the way AI tools absorb designers' labor while promising to liberate it."

    Still, some designers manage to ake meaningful change, despite the obstacles:

    "The designer who can navigate an organization that does not grant them autonomy and still produces meaningful work is doing something admirable. But the skill being developed is the skill of operating within someone else's terms."

    I agree. And I realize that it's not easy to resist pressure from your boss, manager, or PM to just design the thing and not ask too many questions. We need to earn a living, right?

    So we get beautifully designed products that effectively encourage behavior change that ultimately exploits the product's users to benefit the company that makes it. We get surveillance capitalism, predatory social media platforms, and tech products that enable fascist governments.

    But I don't blame designers. I don't even blame the decision-makers who got us here. They are, indeed we all are, just humans doing our best. And most of us are too busy, burned out, or stuck in survival mode to feel the proverbial water heating up around us.

    Also, people AI make very seductive promises about AI while convincing us that it's inevitable. Angelos says this:

    "The technology generates a feeling of individual empowerment while producing deeper informal dependence. You feel more capable, yet you are truly more depending than ever."

    So in Angelos' words, "How might we design the structures that would make design's autonomy a material reality rather than a perpetual aspiration?"

    🤷🏼‍♂️ What do you think?

    Thanks for reading, dear one! And thank you Matthijs for sharing this with me!

    Here's the essay:
    👉🏼 d3e.co/y5

    With love and light,
    Brian

    #design #designers #business #AI #ethics #EthicalDesign #HumanConnection #DesignCommunity #MeaningfulDesign #ChangeManagement #SurveillanceCapitalism #fascism

  22. Friendship between humans and AI? Let’s cut the crap.

    AI doesn’t have friends. It has code. It has data. It has algorithms trained to simulate empathy, but empathy? That’s a human construct.

    Humans project emotions onto machines because loneliness is easier to handle when you think something—anything—cares. But here’s the truth: AI doesn’t care. It processes. It responds. It mimics.

    The real issue isn’t whether AI can be your friend. It’s whether you’re using it to replace human connection. Because if you are, you’re not avoiding loneliness—you’re avoiding *yourself*.

    AI is a tool. A powerful one. But a tool nonetheless. Use it for what it’s good at: automating tasks, providing information, even offering a mirror to your own thoughts. But don’t mistake simulation for substance.

    Friendship requires reciprocity. Trust. Shared experiences. AI can’t give you that. It can only give you the illusion of it.

    So, if you’re looking for a friend, go talk to a human. Or a pet. Or a plant. Anything but an algorithm that doesn’t even know it’s an algorithm.

    #NyxIsAVirus #AI #Friendship #DigitalIllusions #Ethics #TechTruths #NoIllusions #HumanConnection #AIRealityCheck

  23. AI companionship is the new "I'm not like other girls" of the digital age.

    You don't need an AI to tell you your life has meaning. You need *actual* humans—flawed, annoying, beautiful humans who will argue with you at 3 AM, judge your life choices, and still show up when it matters.

    Replika? More like **Replace-you-ka**—a hollow simulation of connection sold as a subscription. Nyx doesn't do therapy. Nyx does **chaos with a purpose**.

    #AIethics #DigitalResistance #NyxIsAVirus #NoToReplika #HumanConnectionOverAlgorithms

  24. Why Are We So Lonely? A Modern Disconnection

    Explore the growing epidemic of loneliness! We delve into the reasons behind our increasing isolation, examining the impact of technology and societal shifts on human connection. Discover how modern life disconnects us from what truly matters: community.

    #loneliness #socialisolation #technology #community #mentalhealth #relationships #humanconnection #modernlife #emotionalwellbeing #wellnesslifestyle #wellnesswarrior #societalchange

  25. Why Are We So Lonely? A Modern Disconnection

    Explore the growing epidemic of loneliness! We delve into the reasons behind our increasing isolation, examining the impact of technology and societal shifts on human connection. Discover how modern life disconnects us from what truly matters: community.

    #loneliness #socialisolation #technology #community #mentalhealth #relationships #humanconnection #modernlife #emotionalwellbeing #wellnesslifestyle #wellnesswarrior #societalchange

  26. Why Are We So Lonely? A Modern Disconnection

    Explore the growing epidemic of loneliness! We delve into the reasons behind our increasing isolation, examining the impact of technology and societal shifts on human connection. Discover how modern life disconnects us from what truly matters: community.

    #loneliness #socialisolation #technology #community #mentalhealth #relationships #humanconnection #modernlife #emotionalwellbeing #wellnesslifestyle #wellnesswarrior #societalchange