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Tech Industry Figures Suddenly Very Concerned That AI Use Is Leading to Psychotic Episodes

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For months, we and our colleagues elsewhere in the tech media have been reporting on what experts are now calling "ChatGPT psychosis": when AI users fall down alarming mental health rabbit holes in which a chatbot encourages wild delusions about conspiracies, mystical entities, or crackpot new scientific theories.

The resulting breakdowns have led users to homelessness, involuntary commitment to psychiatric care facilities, and even violent death and suicide.

Until recently, the tech industry and its financial backers have had little to say about the phenomenon. But last week, one of their own — venture capitalist Geoff Lewis, a managing partner at the multi-billion dollar firm Bedrock who is heavily invested in machine learning ventures including OpenAI — raised eyebrows with a series of posts that prompted concerns about his own mental health.

In the posts, he claimed that he'd somehow used ChatGPT to uncover a shadowy "non-government agency" that he said had "negatively impacted over 7,000 lives" and "extinguished" 12 more.

Whatever's going on with Lewis, who didn't respond to our request for comment, his posts have prompted an unprecedented outpouring of concern among high-profile individuals in the tech industry about what the massive deployment of poorly-understood AI tech may be having on the mental health of users worldwide.

"If you’re a friend or family, please check on him," wrote Hish Bouabdallah, a software engineer who's worked at Apple, Coinbase, Lyft, and Twitter, of Lewis' thread. "He doesn’t seem alright."

Other posts were far less empathetic, though there seemed to be a dark undercurrent to the gallows humor: if a billionaire investor can lose his grip after a few too many prompts, what hope do the rest of us have?

"This is like Kanye being off his meds but for the tech industry," quipped Travis Fischer, a software engineer who's worked at Amazon and Microsoft.

Concretely, Lewis' posts also elicited a wave of warnings about the mental health implications of getting too chummy with chatbots.

"There’s recently been an influx of case reports describing people exhibiting signs of psychosis having their episodes and beliefs amplified by an LLM," wrote Cyril Zakka, a medical doctor and former Stanford researcher who now works at the prominent AI startup Hugging Face.

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