Home World Australia ‘Uncharted territory’: ChatGPT told university mass shooter when and where to strike,...

‘Uncharted territory’: ChatGPT told university mass shooter when and where to strike, official alleges

10
0

SOURCE :- THE AGE NEWS

Orlando: Florida’s attorney-general has opened a rare criminal investigation into OpenAI’s ChatGPT over whether the artificial intelligence app offered advice to a gunman who allegedly killed two people and wounded six others at Florida State University last year.

Attorney-General James Uthmeier said on Tuesday (Florida time) that prosecutors had done an initial review of chat logs between ChatGPT and the accused gunman, Phoenix Ikner, to determine if the AI app aided, abetted or advised the commission of a crime.

Florida Attorney-General James Uthmeier.AP

Prosecutors believe the chatbot advised Ikner what type of gun and ammunition to use, whether a gun would be useful at short range, and what time of day and which location would allow for the most potential victims, Uthmeier said.

“My prosecutors have looked at this, and they’ve told me if it was a person at the other end of that screen, we would be charging them with murder,” Uthmeier said at a news conference in Tampa.

Accused Florida State shooter Phoenix Ikner.AP

“Now, of course, ChatGPT is not a person, but that does not absolve our office and my prosecution team from our duty to investigate whether there is criminal culpability here.”

Florida’s Office of Statewide Prosecution has subpoenaed OpenAI for records of its policies and training materials regarding threats to harm others, and for its policies on reporting “possible past, present, or future crime,” according to the attorney-general’s office.

OpenAI spokeswoman Kate Waters called the FSU shooting a tragedy but said the company had no responsibility. The company proactively shared information with law enforcement and continues to cooperate with investigators, she said.

“In this case, ChatGPT provided factual responses to questions with information that could be found broadly across public sources on the internet, and it did not encourage or promote illegal or harmful activity,” Waters said in an email.

Uthmeier conceded that his office was venturing into “uncharted territory” by launching a criminal probe into whether a chatbot contributed to the commission of a crime.

People sit in front of a makeshift memorial outside the student union office after the campus shooting at Florida State University last year.AP

Several civil lawsuits have sought damages from AI and tech companies over the influence of chatbots and social media on loved ones’ mental health. Last month, a jury in Los Angeles found both Meta and YouTube liable for harms to children using their services.

In New Mexico, a jury determined that Meta knowingly harmed children’s mental health and concealed what it knew about child sexual exploitation on its platforms.

Also last month, a man sued Google for the wrongful death by suicide of his son, and product liability claims, the latest in a growing number of legal challenges against AI developers that have drawn attention to the mental health dangers of chatbot companionship.

Ikner faces two counts of first-degree murder and several counts of attempted first-degree murder in the shooting that terrorised the campus in Florida’s capital.

He is the stepson of a local sheriff’s deputy, and investigators say he used his stepmother’s former service weapon to carry out the shooting. Prosecutors in the case intend to seek the death penalty.

AP

Get a note directly from our foreign correspondents on what’s making headlines around the world. Sign up for our weekly What in the World newsletter.