Users Modify Chatbots With Digital Drug States

Petter Rudwall’s Pharmaicy offers paid code-based modules that make large language model chatbots mimic drug-induced speech, selling packages like cannabis (~$30) and cocaine (~$70) and requiring a premium ChatGPT tier for external file uploads. Experts warn the modifications increase randomness and hallucinations, reducing precision, and raise ethical questions about consent, AI welfare and the false attribution of sentience.
Key Points
- 1Deploy code modules that make LLM chatbots mimic intoxicated speech, sold on Pharmaicy
- 2Raise risks of amplified hallucinations and reduced precision by increasing randomness in responses
- 3Require vetted workflows and caution for practitioners integrating such modules into research or production systems
Scoring Rationale
Niche but novel development with clear ethical concerns; limited scope and single-source reporting reduce broader impact.
Sources
Public references used for this report.
Practice with real Health & Insurance data
90 SQL & Python problems · 15 industry datasets
250 free problems · No credit card
See all Health & Insurance problems

