• @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    373 days ago

    About 3 percent of students in the study had positive mental health outcomes, reporting that talking to the chatbot “halted their suicidal ideation.” But researchers also found “there are some cases where their use is either negligible or might actually contribute to suicidal ideation.”

    This is referring to a bot designed to help with people struggling with mental health, and is actually a big one. That number is way too low.

    • Gamma
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      263 days ago

      “hey, I know you feel like killing yourself, but if it happens then we’ll just replace you with a shitty bot” probably isn’t as helpful as they thought it would be. It’s violating and ghoulish.

      • @OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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        3 days ago

        I hate this attitude of “well if you can’t get a professional therapist, figure out how to get one anyways”. There needs to be an option for people who either can’t afford or can’t access a therapist. I would have loved for AI to fill that gap. I understand it won’t be as good, but in many regions the wait-list for therapy is far too long, and something is better than nothing

        • TehPers
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          113 days ago

          Someone close to me gave up on the hotlines in the US and now just uses ChatGPT. It’s no therapist, but at least it’ll hold a conversation. If only the hotlines here weren’t so absurdly understaffed.

          • Pete Hahnloser
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            73 days ago

            I’ve given up on crisis lines. Their whole premise seems to be “get back to being comfortable with the oppressive system, you little bitch.”

          • @Megaman_EXE@beehaw.org
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            43 days ago

            I’ve used one called PI which I’m assuming is some kind of branch off of chat gpt or something.

            You don’t have to sign up or anything (for now) which is cool. But I assume they harvest all our data and information.

            I tested to see if I could break it once, and from my brief tests, it seemed to never break out of character or tell me something bad or negative, which I thought was interesting(and good!)

            • Pete Hahnloser
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              43 days ago

              I actually used Pi as my intro to generative LLMs. It was … I guess not encouraging self harm, but so fucking irritating that it led me to want to. Always with the irrelevant supportive words that I guess work if you’re a teen?

              • @Megaman_EXE@beehaw.org
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                13 days ago

                Lol yes, that was going to be the one downside I was going to mention. I wasn’t sure if it was just unique to my situation, but I found it would lead me down a logical path. It would ask me if I had tried various solutions.

                Eventually, I would hit a point where it wouldn’t know where to go any further, and it would land on “here’s some things you can do” but those options would be things I was actively trying and failing with.

                So that was fun. In a way, it was great at confirming that I had thought of all the logical options.

  • Pete Hahnloser
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    193 days ago

    Imagine a 3% success rate being acceptable in any situation. That tends to get you fired.

    • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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      3 days ago

      3% success vs what? 6% sent over the edge? 10% 20% ?

      If the journalist asked for a specific figure but was evaded then it should be stated in the article.

      • Pete Hahnloser
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        63 days ago

        I don’t much like that take. Ars commits excellent journalism.

        From the story:

        About 3 percent of students in the study had positive mental health outcomes, reporting that talking to the chatbot “halted their suicidal ideation.” But researchers also found “there are some cases where their use is either negligible or might actually contribute to suicidal ideation.”

        • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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          33 days ago

          I don’t think they contacted the researchers and the linked study does not seem to give the answer (I spent a few minutes looking).

            • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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              23 days ago

              Ars offers free articles while most publications have a paywall, so I imagine funding isn’t as generous as it would have been 30 years ago when such publications would have been in magazine format.

              • Pete Hahnloser
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                32 days ago

                Ars is actually my only paid subscription. Didn’t need to, but wanted to support their journalism.

                • @sqgl@beehaw.org
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                  12 days ago

                  I mistakenly thought you were the actual journalist. But I should always presume the journalist will see my comments and therefore not be so harsh, especially when freeloading.

                  FWIW I subscribe to an (Australian) online newspaper which is free just like you do. The difference being that I rarely read it since I am on top of those topics largely. Am just glad that it exists for others because it is well researched and presented.

    • halyk.the.red
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      43 days ago

      Yeah, I know someone who won’t watch that episode again because of how unsettling it is. Luckily for them, it’s slowly becoming reality.