Topic: Biohacked

5 chapters across the catalog

Dadgum
Episode 1783 1:17:31 - 1:25:48

1783: Dadgum

ChatGPT Induced Psychosis, AI Spiritualism

The hosts examine "ChatGPT induced psychosis," a condition where users believe AI chatbots are sentient beings or spiritual conduits. They cite cases of individuals being involuntarily committed after spiraling into delusions fueled by AI interactions. The discussion links this phenomenon to decades of pop culture preconditioning from films like *2001: A Space Odyssey* and *WarGames*, warning that users are being "biohacked" by the technology.

Pain Sponge
Episode 1609 1:19:29 - 1:25:25

1609: Pain Sponge

LessWrong, Eliezer Yudkowsky, and AI Risk

The origins of the Effective Altruism community are traced back to the "LessWrong" forum started by Eliezer Yudkowsky. Originally focused on cognitive biases and rational thinking, the community has reportedly shifted toward "woke" ideologies and extreme "autistic navel-gazing." The segment discusses how these groups have positioned themselves as the self-declared experts on AI risk to influence global policy.

bio-hacking
Episode 657 2:40:15 - 2:43:44

657: bio-hacking

CBS "Scorpion" Review, Biohacking Plot Absurdity

The CBS procedural "Scorpion" is ridiculed for a scientifically inaccurate plot involving "biohacking." In the episode, a hacker supposedly creates a custom computer virus that physically infects a child through a laptop. The hosts highlight the absurdity of the premise, noting it as a prime example of television content designed for a technologically illiterate audience.

Slaughterhouse Blues
Episode 203 1:43:55 - 1:46:48

203: Slaughterhouse Blues

RFID Virus Propaganda and Human Implants

A BBC report featuring Dr. Mark Gasson claims a computer virus was successfully implanted into a human RFID chip. The hosts debunk the technical feasibility of the story, labeling it as propaganda designed to normalize the idea of human microchipping. They argue the report frames implants as a "cool" security feature for mobile phones and building access to encourage public acceptance.