Close Menu
SportyVibes.live –

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    A Bull Elk Is Terrorizing Campers at Grand Teton National Park

    July 3, 2025

    How ‘28 Years Later’ Director Danny Boyle and Cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle Used iPhones To Shoot a $100 Million Hit

    July 3, 2025

    ‘Desperate’ Diego Luna leads USMNT to Gold Cup final

    July 3, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • A Bull Elk Is Terrorizing Campers at Grand Teton National Park
    • How ‘28 Years Later’ Director Danny Boyle and Cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle Used iPhones To Shoot a $100 Million Hit
    • ‘Desperate’ Diego Luna leads USMNT to Gold Cup final
    • Russia becomes first country to recognise Afghanistan’s Taliban government | Taliban News
    • Hot Dog vs. Hamburger: Which Is Healthier?
    • 9 Best Cross-Training Shoes of 2025, According to Experts
    • Wike slams ADC coalition as “failed and expired politicians”
    • How the Assad Regime Buried Its Victims in a Mass Grave in Syria
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
    SportyVibes.live –SportyVibes.live –
    • Home
    • News
    • Cricket
    • Combat
    • Fitness
    • Football
    • Basketball
    • Tennis
    • Gear
    • Highlights
    SportyVibes.live –
    Home»News»Young woman in Iran turned to ChatGPT, video games amid Israeli strikes : NPR
    News

    Young woman in Iran turned to ChatGPT, video games amid Israeli strikes : NPR

    Sports NewsBy Sports NewsJune 29, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Young woman in Iran turned to ChatGPT, video games amid Israeli strikes : NPR
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Smoke billows from an explosion at the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting (IRIB) building in Tehran after an Israeli strike hit the building, cutting off live coverage, on June 16.

    AFP/Getty Images


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    AFP/Getty Images

    AMMAN, Jordan — Roxana, a young shop manager living alone in Tehran, was panicking during the war with Israel. Her family lives outside the Iranian capital. Her boyfriend was on an Iranian base doing compulsory military service; unreachable and potentially in danger. Even her psychotherapist had fled the bombing in Tehran. So she turned to ChatGPT.

    “I asked it, can you give me a specific time when this is going to end?” says Roxana, 31, reached by phone in Tehran. She did not want her full name used because she is afraid of being arrested by Iranian security services for speaking to foreign media.

    The war that began on June 13 with Israeli attacks against Iranian nuclear sites lasted for 12 days. Iran retaliated by firing ballistic missiles on Israel. The two countries agreed to a ceasefire Tuesday after the U.S. bombed Iranian sites, prompting an Iranian attack on a U.S. air base in Qatar.

    Smoke rises from the rubble of an Iranian state media building in Tehran after an Israeli airstrike on June 16, 2025. The strike, which Israel confirmed targeted "terror-linked propaganda infrastructure," marks a further escalation in regional tensions.

    It was the third or fourth day of the war and explosions sounded like they were getting closer when Roxana tried the artificial intelligence app, she says.

    “It gave me some information that was new to me, like the Islamic Republic’s attempts to lobby the international community,” she says. “It said it might take 10 or 12 more days.”

    Narges Keshavarznia, an internet access researcher at Filterwatch, a project of the U.S.-based digital rights organization Miaan Group, said even though ChatGPT is restricted in Iran, Iranians have been able to access it through specific internet proxies.

    A man stands on the roof of a building while watching the horizon in Tehran on June 16. Iran's state broadcaster was briefly knocked off the air by an Israeli strike and explosions rang out across Tehran that day.

    A man stands on the roof of a building while watching the horizon in Tehran on June 16. Iran’s state broadcaster was briefly knocked off the air by an Israeli strike and explosions rang out across Tehran that day.

    Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty Images

    Iran was in the midst of an internet blackout for hours a day. For some reason, she says, her building had better access than most and ChatGPT was accessible when Google and other search engines were not. When she asked if her building would be targeted or her loved ones killed, it had no good answers. But it tried to give her security advice, she says, including where to shelter in her apartment.

    She had consulted the artificial intelligence app so often it knew what her apartment looked like, down to the location of the furniture. When the war started, ChatGPT became her security advisor, telling her where the safest room in her home was, and when she suffered panic attacks, it became her therapist.

    “I used to speak a lot to it and it knows me,” she says. “By just telling me that ‘this is only a nervous attack and it will pass,’ it helped me a lot,” she says. “I shared my anxieties with it, my financial concerns and worries.”

    An AI-generated image of a fighter plane shot down in the desert with dozens of people walking toward the front of the plane.

    As useful and empathetic-seeming as it was to Roxana, AI chat bots and artificially generated images have also been sources of misinformation and influence campaigns, especially during conflict.

    Roxana says it was always difficult to get information in Iran — many news sites are blocked and she says Iran’s state media cannot be trusted.

    “On their state media, they are trying to show you know, everything is OK and it’s so beautiful and it’s like we live in a garden or something,” she says. “And that makes me even angrier. On Iranian TV it was like ‘the war was over’ and we’d won since the second day.”

    Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu shows an illustration as he describes his concerns over Iran's nuclear ambitions during his address to the 67th session of the United Nations General Assembly at U.N. headquarters, Sept. 27, 2012.

    The frequent internet blackouts made getting any information even more difficult. Iranian media reported that authorities had temporarily blocked internet access to maintain security during the Israeli attacks.

    Roxana says she could hear bombs in the distance when she spoke to her therapist as she was fleeing Tehran. The therapist told her to try not to think of the past or the future and suggested she keep a journal.

    In a huge city beloved by most Iranians but little-known in the West, Roxana wrote of missing bookstores and French pastries.

    Her day-to-day life before the war would also be surprising to many unfamiliar with Iran.

    People walk through the old main bazaar of Tehran, Iran, on a Saturday night, Oct. 19, 2024.

    People walk through the old main bazaar of Tehran, Iran, on a Saturday night, Oct. 19, 2024.

    Vahid Salemi/AP


    hide caption

    toggle caption

    Vahid Salemi/AP

    She describes going to concerts with friends, staying out late and drinking. Although alcohol is banned in the Islamic Republic and public drinking not tolerated, home-brewed alcohol is widely available. Her friends are creatives, and in a country where a cleric is the supreme authority, many of them atheists. She covers her mass of curly hair only when she has to, primarily to access government offices, which enforce mandatory hair covering for women.

    Years of U.S. sanctions and the Iranian government’s own policies have left Iran in financial crisis. A World Bank study two years ago found that 40 Iranians were at risk of falling into poverty. The country’s relatively young population — more than 60% are under 30 years old — have been hit particularly hard by high unemployment and underemployment.

    Much of Roxana’s life and that of her friends is spent figuring out how to make ends meet.

    “I feel like we are the forgotten people,” she says. While the rich in Iran are fine and the destitute have a safety net, she says people like her — the working poor — fall through the cracks.

    “We are trying hard to stand on our feet, not to need anyone. But life is getting harder and harder,” she says. “Now when I receive bills I just look at them and I’m like ‘go to hell.’ There’s nothing I can do about them.”

    She says the food in her apartment is from friends; vegetables and a big bag of rice her boyfriend bought before he had to report for duty.

    Where once, not long ago, Roxana had been studying German with hopes of emigrating and working on improving her skills to produce online content, she says she has abandoned all that.

    “There’s a lot of pressure on us to take a political side,” she says. “But people like me just want to have a calm, peaceful life.”

    Iran says more than 600 Iranians were killed during the almost two weeks of war. The Israeli government says Iranian airstrikes killed 28 people in Israel.

    Roxana says because she can’t sleep, she often stays up all night playing computer games and then sleeps in the day. She has started playing Life is Strange, an adventure game in which the main character can rewind time.

    Roxana says she turned to Life is Strange after her The Sims account where she created a virtual life was hacked at the start of the war and she lost access.

    “The family I had built there, all the life I had built for these characters, it’s lost,” she says. “I couldn’t save the family that I made there.”

    Writing on social media after the ceasefire, she says she and a group of friends gathered in her apartment in the strange silence after the sirens stopped. There was some relief and nervous laughter but mostly sadness about what their lives had become.

    She says they hadn’t asked for much.

    “A little bit of bread, a little bit of joy, a little bit of dreams, a little bit of rights, a little bit of…” she writes, leaving the thought unfinished.

    Sima Ghadirzadeh contributed reporting from Istanbul.

    ChatGPT games Iran Israeli NPR Strikes turned video woman Young
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleBhubaneswar Travel Guide: Temples And Historical Gems In Odisha’s Capital
    Next Article Why we have out-of-school children in Osun
    Sports News
    • Website

    Related Posts

    News

    Russia becomes first country to recognise Afghanistan’s Taliban government | Taliban News

    July 3, 2025
    News

    How the Assad Regime Buried Its Victims in a Mass Grave in Syria

    July 3, 2025
    News

    Rollout of eVisas ‘could drag 200,000 people into Windrush-style scandal’ | Immigration and asylum

    July 3, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Lisa Nandy removes herself from final decision on leader of football regulator | Lisa Nandy

    June 2, 202548 Views

    Beat writer doubts that the Lakers can land Walker Kessler

    June 12, 202521 Views

    Mubi, A Streamer For Cinephiles, Is Now Officially Indispensable

    June 2, 202510 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Football

    Robertson returns as County stick with manager Cowie

    Sports NewsJune 2, 2025
    Highlights

    Spanish GP: Max Verstappen admits George Russell crash ‘shouldn’t have happened’

    Sports NewsJune 2, 2025
    Highlights

    Max Verstappen-George Russell collision: F1 world champion admits move ‘was not right’

    Sports NewsJune 2, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Warriors add sharpshooter in second round of new NBA mock from Yahoo

    June 2, 20250 Views

    Erin Blanchfield rips Maycee Barber after UFC Fight Night cancellation: ‘She needs to fix her life’

    June 2, 20250 Views

    Eagles have $55 million in dead money salary cap

    June 2, 20250 Views
    Our Picks

    A Bull Elk Is Terrorizing Campers at Grand Teton National Park

    July 3, 2025

    How ‘28 Years Later’ Director Danny Boyle and Cinematographer Anthony Dod Mantle Used iPhones To Shoot a $100 Million Hit

    July 3, 2025

    ‘Desperate’ Diego Luna leads USMNT to Gold Cup final

    July 3, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Condtition
    © 2025 sportyvibes. Designed by Pro.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.