this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2025
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Josh was at the end of his rope when he turned to ChatGPT for help with a parenting quandary. The 40-year-old father of two had been listening to his “super loquacious” four-year-old talk about Thomas the Tank Engine for 45 minutes, and he was feeling overwhelmed.

“He was not done telling the story that he wanted to tell, and I needed to do my chores, so I let him have the phone,” recalled Josh, who lives in north-west Ohio. “I thought he would finish the story and the phone would turn off.”

But when Josh returned to the living room two hours later, he found his child still happily chatting away with ChatGPT in voice mode. “The transcript is over 10k words long,” he confessed in a sheepish Reddit post. “My son thinks ChatGPT is the coolest train loving person in the world. The bar is set so high now I am never going to be able to compete with that.”

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[–] Blackfeathr@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

Corporate responsibility is likely never going to happen unfortunately, so long as those currently in power continue to consolidate it. Unless one or more of them suffer actual consequences for their negligence, we're just going to keep seeing more of the same.

A populace that is informed of how and why these corporations weasel around punishments is key to responsible decision making. Unfortunately, we don't have that yet either.

[–] stabby_cicada@slrpnk.net 4 points 1 day ago

The trick is to keep talking about corporate responsibility - and so making people aware of how corporations avoid it, and normalizing the idea that corporations have responsibility - instead of dismissing it with discouraging phrases like "it'll never happen".

Hope is hard. That's why it's so important.