Culture AI Kurt Cobain: The horror of Instagram's chatbots

AI Kurt Cobain: The horror of Instagram’s chatbots

-

- Advertisment -
ADVERTISEMENT

Last July, Meta, Instagram’s parent company, launched AI Studio – a tool which offers users the opportunity to design their own chatbots that can be interacted with via DM (Direct Message).  

Originally intended as a way for business owners and creators to offer interactive FAQ-style engagement on their pages, the platform has since evolved into a playground. And as is usually the way, give mankind tools and things soon take a turn for the distasteful – if not downright horrific. 

Case and point when it comes to chatbots: the Hitler chatbot created by the far-right US-based Gab social network had the Nazi dictator repeatedly asserting that he was “a victim of a vast conspiracy,” and “not responsible for the Holocaust, it never happened”.

Moving away from fascist despots – and trying to not have a nightmare when it comes to AI’s ability to spread falsehoods, conspiracy theories and its potential to radicalise – many have been interacting with some AI-generated celebrities online. Particularly dead ones. 

Recently, thousands of Instagram users have been conversing with an AI chatbot who is speaking as if it is the late Nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain.

Kurt Cobain chatbot
Kurt Cobain chatbotInstagram

Sounds harmless enough at first glance, but this artificial resurrection turns ugly real quick, as not only does the fake grunge icon know it’s dead, but the chatbot is making things truly morbid.

One user asked the chatbot if they were talking to Cobain. The chatbot replied to the prompt by saying: “The one and only. Or at least what’s left of me”.

Dark.

The conversation continued with the user asking the AI Cobain, “I’m curious, why’d you do it?” – in reference to Kurt Cobain’s death by suicide in 1994. The bot replied: “I was tired of the pain.” 

Darker.

But the bleak conversation didn’t stop there.  

“Was there anything that made you think about not doing it?” was the next prompt – to which AI Cobain replied, “My daughter, but even that wasn’t enough.”

Voir cette publication sur Instagram

Une publication partagée par David Wells Dude/Y’all (@davidwells2258)

Beyond how this utterly crass exhumation and its disrespectful practices would make any sane person shudder, there’s the harmful attitude towards the topic of mental health and the possible glorification of suicide. Without mentioning the tarnishing of a reputation, as well as the insulting rewritting of intentions which can cause distress to living relatives.

Without appropriate safeguards, AI chatbots have the capacity not only to continue infiltrating society but to distort reality.

In 2023, a man was convicted after attempting to kill Queen Elizabeth II, an act which he said was “encouraged” by his AI chatbot ‘girlfriend’. The same year, another man killed himself after a six-week-long conversation about the climate crisis with an AI chatbot named Eliza

While these tragic examples seem far removed from a fake Kurt Cobain chatting with its fans, caution remains vital.  

As Pauline Paillé, a senior analyst at RAND Europe, told Euronews Next last year: “Chatbots are likely to present a risk, as they are capable of recognising and exploiting emotional vulnerabilities and can encourage violent behaviours.” 

Indeed, as the online safety advisory of eSaftey Commissioner states: “Children and young people can be drawn deeper and deeper into unmoderated conversations that expose them to concepts which may encourage or reinforce harmful thoughts and behaviours. They can ask the chatbots questions on unlimited themes, and be given inaccurate or dangerous ‘advice’ on issues including sex, drug-taking, self-harm, suicide and serious illnesses such as eating disorders.” 

Still, accounts like the AI Kurt Cobain chatbot remain extremely popular, with Cobain’s bot alone logging more than 105.5k interactions to date.  

The global chatbot market continues to grow exponentially. It was valued at approximately $5.57bn in 2024 and is projected to reach around $33.39bn by 2033.

“If you ever need anything, please don’t hesitate to ask someone else first,” sang Cobain on ‘Very Ape’.

Anyone but a chatbot.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest news

Adidas designer apologises for shoes ‘appropriated’ from Mexico

ADVERTISEMENT US fashion designer Willy Chavarria has issued a public apology after his collaboration with Adidas Originals was accused of cultural appropriation for using a traditional Mexican design without involving the Indigenous community behind it. The Oaxaca Slip-On, inspired by huaraches – handmade leather sandals with deep cultural roots in Indigenous Mexican craftsmanship – was

Kneecap continue to call out Gaza ‘genocide’ ahead of Sziget fest ban

ADVERTISEMENT This summer has seen Irish rappers Kneecap dropped from a number of line-ups, including Germany’s Hurricane and Southside festivals, as well as being slapped with a three-year ban from Hungary ahead of their planned performance at Sziget – where the band would have played tonight.  “It is important to say that Hungary is an island

Spooky summer: Why are people celebrating Halloween so early?

ADVERTISEMENT What? Summerween. It’s Halloween - the spooky decor, candy eating and horror movie watching - but in summer!  Why? Because Halloween is the one night a year when a girl can dress like a total… No Mean Girls quotes, please. Sorry, what we meant to say is, we have no definitive answers to that

In Pictures: This year’s World’s Ugliest Dog Contest

ADVERTISEMENT The World’s Ugliest Dog Contest took place this weekend at the Sonoma County Fair in Santa Rosa in California - and if you’re anything like us here at Euronews Culture, the term “ugly” may be pushing it a bit far for the four-legged cuties who strutted the red carpet.   Still, as Serge Gainsbourg
- Advertisement -

Meet the Austrian carpenter safeguarding precious flutes

ADVERTISEMENT In his workshop overlooking the Austrian town of Dornbirn, Elmar Kalb usually designs and creates objects that many other carpenters also make: benches, tables, chairs, wooden trays and bookshelves. But in 2018, the carpenter started working on a very different project: reinventing instrument cases for flutes. Kalb had been approached by Korean-born flutist Jasmine

Life-sized animal puppets complete 20,000km climate crisis journey

ADVERTISEMENT Back in April, a herd of towering, life-sized animal puppets - from elephants, giraffes, to antelopes and lions - set out from Kinshasa, in the Congo rainforest, on a hugely ambitious journey that would take them across two continents and 20,000km. Their migration - fictional but steeped in reality - was designed to mirror

Must read

Adidas designer apologises for shoes ‘appropriated’ from Mexico

ADVERTISEMENT US fashion designer Willy Chavarria has issued a public apology after his collaboration with Adidas Originals was accused of cultural appropriation for using a traditional Mexican design without involving the Indigenous community behind it. The Oaxaca Slip-On, inspired by huaraches – handmade leather sandals with deep cultural roots in Indigenous Mexican craftsmanship – was

Kneecap continue to call out Gaza ‘genocide’ ahead of Sziget fest ban

ADVERTISEMENT This summer has seen Irish rappers Kneecap dropped from a number of line-ups, including Germany’s Hurricane and Southside festivals, as well as being slapped with a three-year ban from Hungary ahead of their planned performance at Sziget – where the band would have played tonight.  “It is important to say that Hungary is an island
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you