About AI Fallout
Stories about AI should belong to people, not only to companies.
AI Fallout is a public archive for the human side of AI: job loss, false accusations, creative theft, surveillance, reputation damage, automation pressure, and the smaller daily disruptions that rarely make it into product launches.
The site also publishes fictional future dispatches, but they are kept separate and clearly labeled. Real stories should not be diluted by fiction, and fiction should not pretend to be evidence.
Why this exists
Most AI coverage follows the companies, the models, the funding, and the promises. AI Fallout starts from the other end: what happened to the person on the receiving side?
A single story may not prove a trend. But many careful stories, collected in one place, can show patterns before institutions are ready to name them.
What belongs here
Real accounts should be submitted in good faith and focused on what happened, what changed, and what the impact was. Fictional dispatches should explore plausible futures without pretending to be real events.
- Real stories from work, school, creative life, hiring, business, reputation, privacy, or daily life.
- Future dispatches that use fiction or satire to make a risk easier to understand.
- Comments that add context, careful disagreement, support, or useful questions.
What we do not want
This is not a place for doxxing, harassment, scams, ads, fabricated real stories, or automated participation pretending to be human. Real pain should not become bait, and speculation should not become a weapon.
How we moderate
Stories are reviewed before publication. Reports, comments, and account behavior are reviewed when they create safety, privacy, spam, or classification concerns.
Moderation will not be perfect, but the goal is clear: keep the archive useful, human, and honest about what is real and what is imagined.