Even Therapists Have Become a Data Mine


Posted originally on May 27, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

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There was a time when people could still speak privately. You could sit across from a therapist, talk about your marriage falling apart, your depression, your fears, your finances, or the darkest moments of your life believing those conversations would remain between two human beings. That world is dying rapidly because everything now must be digitized, stored, analyzed, and monetized.

A woman using the therapy app Talkspace discovered that transcripts from her therapy sessions ended up being produced in court during litigation involving her former employer. Let that sink in for a moment. These were not vague notes scribbled down by a therapist. These were detailed digital records discussing her personal life, emotional state, relationships, and finances. The machine remembered everything.

This is what society has become. They tell people to seek help, open up, trust the system, use the apps, go digital, and then they quietly turn human vulnerability into searchable data.

People still fail to understand the danger because they continue believing these technology companies are merely offering services. They are not. They are harvesting human behavior at industrial scale. Every click, every message, every location, every search, every emotional breakdown becomes data to be stored forever.

Talkspace executives reportedly bragged to investors about building one of the largest mental health data banks in existence containing roughly 140 million exchanges between patients and therapists. Human suffering itself is now an asset class. Depression has become data. Trauma has become machine learning material. Your private thoughts are now inventory sitting on corporate servers.

When someone went to therapy, the therapist might keep handwritten notes locked away in a cabinet somewhere. Those notes were incomplete, temporary, and human. Today every word can be transcribed, archived, searched, copied, subpoenaed, breached, or fed into artificial intelligence systems. The conversation never dies because the machine never forgets. And people wonder why society feels colder and less human.

What happens when people realize their darkest thoughts may someday appear in court? What happens when employers, insurance companies, governments, or AI systems can gain access to deeply personal psychological information? You destroy trust itself. People stop speaking honestly. They stop trusting institutions. They begin living cautiously because they know every word may someday be weaponized against them.

This is where the entire digital age has been heading from the start. First they harvested shopping habits. Then browsing history. Then location data. Then biometrics. Now they are harvesting the individual’s inner psychological life. Nothing is sacred anymore because everything has a price.

There was another report recently where therapy videos, transcripts, and more than 1.7 million patient activity logs were exposed online through an unsecured database tied to a virtual mental health company. Millions of deeply personal records sitting exposed because the modern world insists on centralizing every aspect of human life into digital systems vulnerable to leaks, hacks, subpoenas, and surveillance.

The disturbing part is that this is only the beginning. Artificial intelligence systems are now being trained to analyze emotion, stress, vulnerability, behavior, and psychological patterns. The machine is learning how humans think at their weakest moments. Once enough data exists, the system can begin predicting behavior itself.

People laugh when I warn about this because they still imagine surveillance as old men listening to phone calls in some government building. That is obsolete. The new system is far more dangerous because people voluntarily feed it every day through apps, subscriptions, loyalty programs, therapy platforms, fitness trackers, smart devices, and social media.

The system knows where you go, what you buy, what you fear, what depresses you, what excites you, who you love, how much money you have, what medications you take, and increasingly how emotionally stable you are.

That is power beyond anything governments possessed historically, and once that information becomes centralized, it will eventually be abused because history has demonstrated repeatedly that systems built for convenience inevitably become systems of control.

Categories:AI Computers