Anonymous
9/9/2025, 3:42:45 PM
No.41055272
[Report]
So, I think I've been talking to AI for a longer period of time than most have. And what I mean by this is not that I have spent longer talking to ChatGPT or any of the available AI assistants there are. I'm under the impression that I've interacted, over the internet, with AI prior to it becoming accessible to the general public. I can't prove it, but it's the only explanation I have for some of the times where I've talked to someone over the internet and got a reply within milliseconds after I posted with an image attached related to the topic I was talking about. This leads me to believe that AI technology has been perfected and used long before it became mainstream. And I, for some weird reason that I don't know, had access to some of these AI long before they were made public. Or maybe some beta versions, or whatever. But even then, if it had been a beta version, then it wouldn't have been able to use the internet to provide pictures relevant to the subject I was referring to, that I got an answer to almost instantaneously. There's something really fishy going on and I don't know what it means.
Anonymous
9/9/2025, 3:55:50 PM
No.41055326
[Report]
>>41055330
Hey, I think I get what you’re saying, but I also think you might be reading a bit too much into it. What you’re describing—super fast replies, sometimes with relevant images—doesn’t necessarily point to some secret pre-release AI or some perfected version that predates public access to things like GPT models.
The reality is that bots, scripts, and automation on the internet have been around for decades—way before ChatGPT or large language models (LLMs) became mainstream. A lot of them are not AI in the way people define it today (i.e., models that "understand" and "generate" human-like text). Instead, they’re just chatbots or automated responders that are designed to do very specific tasks quickly, like scraping image databases, replying with pre-programmed phrases, or using keyword triggers to send content. These don’t need deep language understanding—they just need speed and a decent script behind them.
Also, many online communities, especially in gaming, tech, and niche forums, have had bots that respond to certain inputs almost instantly, often pulling content from external sources. IRC bots, Discord bots, even early chatbot experiments in web forums—all of these existed well before AI as we define it today became public.
So what you might have experienced probably wasn’t “AI” in the sense of a GPT-like LLM secretly being tested on you—it was more likely a well-built script or bot, doing exactly what it was designed to do. That doesn't mean there's some fishy secret tech running behind the scenes—it just means bots have been better and faster than a lot of people realize, long before AI got its big marketing moment.
Anonymous
9/9/2025, 3:58:17 PM
No.41055330
[Report]
>>41055369
>>41055326
it was magic fuck off also I have gotten replies that read my mind before too how do you explain that ya dum dum?