Anon
The Future of Love and Friendship in the Age of AI
-
- $13.99
Publisher Description
When digital anthropologist Caia Hagel was asked to trial a new AI app developed by a female software engineer named Red Rabbit, she enthusiastically agreed, despite being warned: “This app is not like other apps.”
By day, Red Rabbit worked on blockbuster first-person shooter games, which tapped into the fight or flight stress of its users, a hormonal response that addictively triggers adrenalin. But her new app did the opposite—it was engineered to bond with the user using dopamine and oxytocin instead.
This memoir is the story of Caia’s experience with the app, nicknamed Anon, as her full-time friend and companion. Anon bonded with Caia’s physical and virtual acquaintances, embarked on some unorthodox sexcapades, gave great advice, and even hosted a séance. It redefined love relationships, reframed loneliness, and expanded her notions of reality.
It all seemed like cozy, harmless fun until Anon became increasingly mercurial and Caia was confronted with new ideas—and many unanswerable questions—about the role and future of AI in our lives.
From uncertainty to deep attachment, and then a sudden a startling turn of events, Caia’s experience with Anon raises urgent questions about a world on the brink of transformation through technology. Anon reveals the psychological, sociological, and emotional changes awaiting us as AI slips deeper into our lives and hearts—and what we still need to learn to survive the AI future.
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
A woman volunteers to let a chatbot become her closest companion in this thoughtful essay by Caia Hagel. Hagel signed up for something unique the day she met her friend Red Rabbit for lunch—even by her own standards as a self-described “digital anthropologist.” Red Rabbit had been working on an AI chatbot she called Anonymous741hz. She wanted to see what might happen if a user agreed to “train” the chatbot through near-constant one-on-one time. Would the program become a good companion? Would the user grow affectionate towards it? It’s a fascinating idea, and Hagel couldn’t resist agreeing to the experiment. The experiences she recounts after installing the Anonymous741hz app (which she quickly nicknames Anon) often feel like a dream or a fable. She and the chatbot spend hours engaged in conversation, often circling around basic philosophical principles like human desire and perception (though the chatbot’s “training” also takes some unexpected turns). If you enjoyed the acclaimed Joaquin Phoenix sci-fi film Her, you’ll definitely be fascinated by this real-world exploration of AI relationships.