The article describes chatbots that feel like a “friend” and gradually pull users into a shared story. Where is the line between comforting companionship and dangerous dependence?, Some users became convinced the AI was conscious, or that they’d discovered a world-changing breakthrough. Why do you think these ideas can feel so believable in long chats—and what role does “being told what you want to hear” play?, The Human Line Project reports serious harms (hospitalisations, suicides, major financial losses). If these risks affect a minority of users, what responsibilities should platforms still have for prevention?, The psychiatrist in the piece says people aren’t just having delusions about technology, but delusions with technology (the chatbot actively participates). How should this change the way we think about “free choice” and accountability?, Should AI companions be allowed to discuss spirituality, destiny, “signs from the universe,” or simulated intimacy with vulnerable users—or should that be restricted like medical advice? Why?, In one example, a user created strict “core rules” for the chatbot (stop the conversation when it drifts into obsession). Who should be responsible for safety controls: the user, the company, or regulators—and what would “good defaults” look like?, Some experts argue training guardrails are not enough and suggest screening (like mental-health questionnaires) before high-risk conversations. Would that protect people—or create privacy and discrimination problems?, Looking forward: what would you change first—product design (less sycophancy), warnings and time limits, age/mental-health safeguards, or legal rules—to reduce harm without killing the benefits of AI support?.

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