Remember
the
last
time
you
posted
a
salient
take
to
social
media
and
got
zero
engagement,
or
trolled?
Now
you
can
avoid
that
with
a
new
“social
network”
full
of
inane
AI
chatbots
that
will
—
your
pick!
—
debate
you,
attack
you,
or
even
just
say
nice
things
if
you
want.
It’s
called
SocialAI,
and
the
very
first
thing
it
invites
you
to
do
is
pick
the
followers
you
want,
like
“supporters,”
“nerds,”
“skeptics,”
“visionaries,”
and
“ideators.”
Afterward,
endless
chatbots
along
those
themes
fill
the
replies
to
your
posts
—
not
unlike
the
bots
and
boosters
you’ll
already
find
on
Elon
Musk’s
social
network,
but
now
under
your
control.
Does
that
mean
it’s
any
better?
Well,
take
a
look:
I
thought
a
Nintendo
social
network
sounded
pretty
good.Screenshot:
SocialAI
Well
if
it’s
looking
to
emulate
out-of-the-blue
replies
on
social
media,
it’s
doing
a
bang-up
job
here.
Above,
the
“interesting
social
dynamics”
of
chilling
in
a
hot
tub
five
feet
away
from
bros.
I’m
glad
Dr.
Eloise
Hartmann
respects
opinions.
Surprisingly,
the
bots
actually
seem
to
have
some
concrete
feelings
on
the
PS5
Pro
—
I
guess
a
$699
price
tag
will
do
that.
You
can
summon
a
techbro
whenever
you
like.Image:
SocialAI
As
alx1231
points
out,
the
AI
threads
it
serves
up
aren’t
any
worse
than
the
least
interesting
things
the
algorithm
sometimes
serves
you
on
Threads
or
X.
The
difference
is
that
try
as
we
might,
we
could
not
get
the
chatbots
to
be
all
that
mean
to
us!
The
bots
always
reply
in
the
same
basic
format,
just
a
few
brief
retorts
or
quips,
and
even
when
we
chose
to
max
out
trolling
and
sarcasm,
we
didn’t
see
any
personal
attacks.
When
we
tried
to
create
a
positive
echo
chamber
instead,
they
had
no
problem
calling
hot
dogs
the
“sparkly
sandwiches
of
the
world”
or
including
out-of-place
chart
emoji.
And
yes,
let’s
discuss
the
science
of
peanut
butter
and
jelly
and
its
impact
on
cognition
and
mood!
So
you
get
the
idea.
If
you’ve
used
early
chatbots,
these
kinds
of
replies
should
look
familiar,
and
this
isn’t
even
the
first
social
networking
app
that
has
experimentally
replaced
all
of
the
humans
with
generative
AI.
SocialAI
comes
across
as
sort
of
a
joke,
or
maybe
some
kind
of
meta-commentary
on
the
concept
of
social
media
and
cheap
engagement,
particularly
after
creator
Michael
Sayman
helpfully
explained:
“now
we
can
all
know
what
Elon
Musk
feels
like
after
acquiring
Twitter
for
$44
billion,
but
without
having
to
spend
$44
billion.”
He
also
says
it’s
“designed
to
help
people
feel
heard,”
though,
and
is
ostensibly
a
way
to
help
people
avoid
feeling
isolated.
There’s
no
edit
button,
by
the
way.
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
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