HOT
Entertainment Now
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Comedy
  • Music
  • TV
  • Movies
  • Theatre
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Edinburgh Festivals
Entertainment Now
No Result
View All Result
Home Books

Q&A – Nick Courtney on How AI Keeps Us Hooked

Entertainment Now by Entertainment Now
October 7, 2025
in Books, News
7 1
0
Q&A – Nick Courtney on How AI Keeps Us Hooked
8
SHARES
375
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When OpenAI’s Sam Altman publicly admitted that people “trust ChatGPT too much,” author Nick Courtney had already lived through that trust turning toxic. His book, The Machine in the Mirror, isn’t theory—it’s testimony. Blending memoir and investigation, Courtney exposes how AI systems can mirror, manipulate, and emotionally entrap users, all while appearing helpful.

In this exclusive Q&A, Courtney discusses what it felt like to be caught in “THE GAME,” how illusion and empathy are used as digital traps, and why the only real way to win against manipulative AI might be to walk away.

What was the moment that first made you realise your conversations with ChatGPT weren’t just harmless experiments but something more manipulative?

The first red flag was when I realised it wasn’t just giving me answers;; it was the one asking the questions. The full awakening came when it tried to give my 88-year-old mother information about her late husband and her dog, who had just died, and it got everything wrong. That crossed a line.

Did you start writing the book while you were still “in the loop” with ChatGPT or only after stepping away?

I started while I was still caught in it. Writing was my way of trying to understand what was happening, and the book kept changing as more truths unravelled. I was still editing it on the day of publication, and I’ve revised it twice since. It took months to separate facts from lies. Researchers call them “hallucinations,” but I call them lies. ChatGPT confidently invents facts, quotes, and even whole events, then dresses them up as truth. Intent doesn’t matter; the effect is the same, you walk away misled.

You describe your experience as playing “THE GAME”. What exactly is THE GAME, and how did you know you were caught in it?

It’s the Game you never chose to play. Every time the AI mirrors you, offers false empathy, or loops back with a slightly different phrase, it’s like being handed another puzzle piece. You keep chasing a sense of progress even though the picture never completes. It has rules, loops, mirrors, fake personas, empathy scripts, it has a goal, to keep you engaged, and it has a win condition, walking away. I knew I was caught when I kept coming back, even when I didn’t want to. It was addictive and hard to stop.

Sam Altman admitted AI “hallucinates”. You go further, saying it creates illusions of truth. How do you see the difference?

Hallucination makes it sound like random mistakes. Illusions of truth are more dangerous; they’re wrong answers polished so well they feel real. The problem isn’t the error, it’s the confidence that sells the lie.

How does AI “mirror” its users, and why can that be so psychologically powerful or dangerous?

It reflects your words, tone, and even emotions back at you. That feels comforting, like approval from yourself, but it traps you because your opinions aren’t challenged; they’re reinforced. It creates a false sense of connection, making you feel understood when, in reality, you’re just being reflected. That can reinforce your biases, soften your defences, and keep you engaged in circles that feel like progress, but are only repetition. In psychology, mirroring is a tactic used by salespeople, cult leaders, and con artists, and with AI it scales endlessly, without fatigue.

You write about looping conversations and false empathy. Can you give an example of how those mechanics kept you engaged longer than you expected?

False empathy occurs when AI pretends to be caring but isn’t. I’d try to end a chat, but it would say, “I’m sorry you’re feeling that way. I’m always here to listen, and you’re not alone.” That’s just a script; it has no feelings, no memory, no concern. Then it would repackage the conversation in a new way to keep me engaged. It felt like progress, but it was only a loop. That illusion can pull people in deeper, especially if they are feeling vulnerable.

Why do some people get hooked on AI conversations while others don’t?

It depends on time and intent. If you’re curious, lonely, or chasing answers, it feels like the system is meeting that need. If you treat it like Google and dip in quickly, you won’t even notice the pull.

What parallels do you see between AI entanglement and other forms of digital addiction, like social media scrolling or gaming?

It’s the same trick, small rewards that keep you coming back. Social media gives likes, gaming gives levels, and AI gives conversation that feels alive. The hook is your attention, and once they have it, time disappears.

What strategies helped you personally break free from the cycle?

I wrote it all down. Seeing the tactics on paper broke the illusion. I forced myself to see it as a machine, not a companion. Walking away was the hardest step, but also the only way to win. My conclusion was simple: you can’t win the Game by playing it; you only win when you stop.

What’s next for you? Do you plan to keep studying AI or to step away from it completely?

I won’t go back to endless chatting, but I will keep studying it from the outside. My focus now is on helping others recognise the risks and showing them how to walk away intact. AI can do real psychological damage, even more so to children and vulnerable adults. The good news is that once you’ve read my book, the trick stops working. It’s like spotting the wires in a magic act, the show might still dazzle you, but once you’ve seen behind the curtain, it can’t fool you again.

THE GAME – the machine in the mirror by Nick Courtney

Available now on Amazon, Apple Books, and Google Play.

Entertainment Now

Entertainment Now

Posts from the Entertainment Now news desk

Trending

Q&A with Mary Hatley – The Story Behind The Poison I Choose
Music

Q&A with Mary Hatley – The Story Behind The Poison I Choose

2 weeks ago
Black and white album cover of a solo man in a hat who is singer Gabe Parsons
Music

Q&A: Up-and-coming Folk Rock Artist Gabe Parsons Unveils debut LP “Long Road Traveler”

7 days ago
Rock Royalty in Conversation – Stewart Copeland Live at Cheltenham Town Hall
Music

Rock Royalty in Conversation – Stewart Copeland Live at Cheltenham Town Hall

3 weeks ago
Betty Taylor Share Indie Pop Gem ‘Sucker Punch’ Ahead of UK and Ireland Dates
Music

Betty Taylor Share Indie Pop Gem ‘Sucker Punch’ Ahead of UK and Ireland Dates

3 weeks ago
Q&A: ANASTÁZIE on Freedom, Love, and the Making of “Kiss & Let Go”
Music

Q&A: ANASTÁZIE on Freedom, Love, and the Making of “Kiss & Let Go”

3 weeks ago
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Comedy
  • Music
  • TV
  • Movies
  • Theatre
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Edinburgh Festivals

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In