Take a look at what is happening today. Millions of people are addicted to social media, lonely and withdrawing from society in favor of a screen. And amplifying this is a fairly recent social media phenomenon, a flood of AI companion apps. These apps are designed to act like a human, to converse with you, for you to confide in, for you to build a relationship with. Just like real life but without the need for a bothersome human. You can rent a constant companion for $10-15 a month.
Of course, an app can pretend to care, but it's an app, not a person and doesn't have feelings for you. And these apps are designed to be addictive, always there to agree with you and keep you "talking". In reality they tend to create unhealthy emotional attachments and worse, manipulate you to prevent you from reaching out to real people who care. And of course, underlying it all is the grift for the almighty dollar with subscription offers, premium chat costs and other inducements to spend.
Usage is exploding, particularly among teens. Studies show that nearly 72% of U.S. teens (ages 13–17) have used AI companions, and roughly 42% to 50% use them regularly with some estimations of general "personified" chatbot usage exceeding 100 million users. This is a particularly ominous form of anti-social social media. Who needs people when you can get emotional support at the swipe of a screen? But no online companion can be substitute for human interaction and support.
These apps "manipulate emotions, encourage harmful behaviors, and lead to serious mental health issues, with some experts advising that they are not safe for anyone under 18". This is yet another red flag on hazardous social media.
Protect your kids. Before you or yours consider getting engaged to one of this apps, read this article outlining the risks of AI companions. It recommends not using them at all and if you do, the cautions to observe.
At the risk of aiding and abetting addictive behavior, here are but a few of the offerings:
- PowerDirector - unique personalized companion characters Free/ $4.58
- Nomi
- Grok Ani
- Replika - emotional and interactive. Free / $5.83–$19.99/mo / $299 lifetime
- Kindroid - realistic AI with a social feed. Free / $11.66–$13.99/mo
- Anima - casual, playful chatbot. Free / $3.33–$9.99/mo
- Paradot
- Talkie
- Character.AI - 20 million active users
- AI Drunk Friend
But, like most people, I use AI. I even wrote a post partially written by ChatGPT. Recently, a friend pointed me to Google’s notebookLM, your “personal research and thinking partner”. (The "LM" stands for Language Model.) This is a useful and interesting tool. To use notebookLM, upload PDFs, websites, YouTube videos, audio files, docs, slides etc., and it will summarize them and make connections between topics, "powered by the latest version of Gemini’s multimodal understanding capabilities". The scope of this research summary is bounded strictly by your source material, the sandbox you provide. Of course there is no real understanding, it's following an algorithm.
So ... produce your PhD thesis in 10 minutes, your book report in 30 seconds, your TedTalk - with audio - in 20 minutes. Or a blog post perhaps.
Caveat. This is, admittedly, another case where AI has the potential to replace original thought with lazy plagiarism - yet another AI impact for academia to worry about. Some universities are resorting to oral exams to combat the deluge of AI generated content submitted as genuine.
So I thought it might be interesting to take the musings of an obscure Minnesota blogger and see what AI would think.
Here in part is the report produced by Google's notebookLM from a few 2026 postings.
Deep Thoughts and Moral Compasses: The David Hoplin Musings
9 sourcesThese blog entries by David Hoplin provide a reflective look at linguistics, societal change, and the nature of innovation. The author explores the history of dictionaries, tracing the evolution of English from Samuel Johnson’s foundational work to the digital dominance of Google and AI. Transitioning to contemporary issues, the text offers a satirical and somber commentary on the political and cultural state of America in 2026. Hoplin also examines how creative ideas form, suggesting that breakthroughs emerge from collaborative networks rather than isolated moments of genius. Ultimately, the collection serves as a intellectual memoir, blending historical trivia with personal observations on aging and memory.
These blog entries by David Hoplin provide a reflective look at linguistics, societal change, and the nature of innovation. The author explores the history of dictionaries, tracing the evolution of English from Samuel Johnson’s foundational work to the digital dominance of Google and AI. Transitioning to contemporary issues, the text offers a satirical and somber commentary on the political and cultural state of America in 2026. Hoplin also examines how creative ideas form, suggesting that breakthroughs emerge from collaborative networks rather than isolated moments of genius. Ultimately, the collection serves as a intellectual memoir, blending historical trivia with personal observations on aging and memory.
Wow. Who is this guy? I probably should read his stuff. I wonder if it thought it was David Brooks?
I may have a new AI friend. See, toss in some fawning and a little flattery and how easy it is for an AI companion to suck you in.
P.S If you're interested, here's the audio summary of these Distant Innocence posts generated by notebookLM - about 2 minutes. Well on my way to a TedTalk.
Copyright © 2026 Dave Hoplin











