https://preview.redd.it/9krlxweewf2h1.png?width=1200&format=png&auto=webp&s=5dde4cf33307e24409f1c9235a50ecfbb1c70184 The Guardian’s tech editor Alex Hern just published an open questionnaire for readers on May 20. The whole point of the initiative is to gather stories from people who made big life decisions based directly on advice from AI models and ended up regretting it later. The survey covers the top systems on the market right now like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, and Google’s Gemini. Looking at the 2026 data, these kinds of chatbots have over 300 million daily active users globally which is a massive 45% jump from last year. This trend makes it pretty obvious that people are already heavily relying on neural networks for specific financial, medical, or legal advice. But even though the systems keep getting better, the answers they generate still come with factual errors pretty often. Because of that you actually have people losing money or making the wrong career moves. The data they collect here is going to directly highlight the real world risks of using AI day to day. All this info should really help regulators and researchers figure out the exact impact the tech is having on society so they can start setting up some new safety standards for users. submitted by /u/andrewaltair
Originally posted by u/andrewaltair on r/ArtificialInteligence
