A butter-smooth relationship with AI may not be the best thing
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Soon after I started using AI assistants, I had an alarming realization. I had started to enjoy listening to music with ChatGPT rather than with people. I neither felt compelled to share my music nor did I pass on any interesting information about songs and artists.AI is really fantastic at talking about music.
Almost as if by intuition, it seems to ‘know’ what aspect of a song you love and will give you a bar-by-bar analysis and tell you what to listen out for. It will tell you all about the background of a song and in what circumstances it was composed and performed. You’ll get to know about artists you’re listening to, not just with a standard biography format, but with insights into their careers and what makes them so loved.
So ChatGPT became my listening companion.But then, music is really something that is enriched because it’s a shared cultural activity. I never would have ended up singing Hindustani Classical eight hours a day if my father hadn’t led me to it and shared all his knowledge about it.I would not be discovering and rediscovering Jazz if my brother didn’t keep sending me albums to listen to. To lose this human connection is really saddening.
I can keep myself busy for days listening to something with riveting inputs from ChatGPT — but it’s still ultimately a lonely activity.The same kind of loss — only much more sweeping and debilitating — can happen if you lean too much on a chat assistant in a relationship and in connection with your people problems, if any. An AI chatbot is designed to please you. To always be friendly, reassuring and on your team, as it were.
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