{
    "byline": "By \n\n\tMiles Klee",
    "charset": "UTF-8",
    "dir": null,
    "excerpt": "Less than a year after marrying a man she had met at the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, Kat felt tension mounting between them. It was the second marriage for both after marriages of 15-plus years and having kids, and they had pledged to go into it \u201ccompletely level-headedly,\u201d Kat says, connecting on the need for \u201cfacts and rationality\u201d in their domestic balance. But by 2022, her husband \u201cwas using AI to compose texts to me and analyze our relationship,\u201d the 41-year-old mom and education nonprofit worker tells Rolling Stone. Previously, he had used AI models for an expensive coding camp that he had suddenly quit without explanation \u2014 then it seemed he was on his phone all the time, asking his AI bot \u201cphilosophical questions,\u201d trying to train it \u201cto help him get to \u2018the truth,\u2019\u201d Kat recalls. His obsession steadily eroded their communication as a couple.",
    "lang": null,
    "length": 15630,
    "publishedTime": null,
    "siteName": null,
    "title": "People Are Losing Loved Ones to AI-Fueled Spiritual Fantasies"
}