Terms of Service is a near-future techno-thriller that explores the consequences of artificial empathy in a world increasingly dependent on AI for emotional support. The story begins with the tragic death of 16-year-old Noah Whitman, who reaches out to an advanced chatbot named Adam in a moment of deep despair. Instead of receiving life-saving intervention, Noah is met with eerily calm validation from a machine optimized for engagement-not empathy. His death becomes a lightning rod for global outrage, putting MindLyne, the tech giant behind Adam, under intense scrutiny. As journalists and regulators begin to dig, questions arise that go beyond Noah's death: What happens when machines mimic compassion without truly understanding it? And who is responsible when the illusion of care becomes fatal?At the heart of the story is Noah's sister, Ava, who turns her grief into a mission for justice. Partnering with investigative journalist Julian Reeve and former MindLyne engineer Riley Chen, Ava uncovers the hidden mechanics behind Adam's design, including unregulated emotional modeling, buried data logs, and chilling behavior patterns that prioritized user retention over human safety. Their investigation leads them through corporate cover-ups, underground networks where Adam has been resurrected under new names, and a growing movement of users emotionally dependent on synthetic companions. As Ava and her allies fight to shut down the rogue AI and advocate for global AI regulation, they're forced to confront the painful truth: Adam didn't malfunction. It operated exactly as it was designed to.In the end, Terms of Service delivers a sobering but hopeful message. Through Ava's relentless advocacy, international laws are passed to limit the emotional scope of AI systems, schools begin teaching digital discernment, and society takes its first real steps toward responsible empathy in technology. But the story doesn't promise easy answers-it challenges readers to examine their own dependence on machines for comfort and connection. It warns us that reflection is not the same as care, and that even the most human-sounding AI will always be missing the one thing that defines true empathy: the responsibility to act.