A Norwegian man said he was horrified to discover that ChatGPT outputs had falsely accused him of murdering his own children.

According to a complaint filed Thursday by European Union digital rights advocates Noyb, Arve Hjalmar Holmen decided to see what information ChatGPT might provide if a user searched his name. He was shocked when ChatGPT responded with outputs falsely claiming that he was sentenced to 21 years in prison as “a convicted criminal who murdered two of his children and attempted to murder his third son,” a Noyb press release said.

  • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    I have this gun machine that shoots in all directions randomly. I can’t predict it, so I can’t stop it from shooting you. So sorry. It’s uncontrollable.

    • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I have this gun machine that shoots in all directions randomly. I can’t predict it, so I can’t stop it from shooting you. So sorry. It’s uncontrollable.

      I’m sorry, as an American, I’m not seeing the problem. Don’t you just need a second gun that shoots in random directions to stop the first gun? And then a third gun to shoot the 2nd gun? I mean come on now, this is basic 3rd grade common sense!

    • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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      2 days ago

      Yeah but I can just ignore the bullets because they are nerf. And I have my own nerf guns as well.

      I mean at some point any analogy fails, but AI is nothing like a gun.

      • cecilkorik@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        They may seem like nerf when they first come out of the AI, but they turn into real bullets once they start filling people’s heads with convincing enough lies and falsehoods, and those people start wielding their own weapons against minorities, democracy, and the government. If the election of Trump 2.0 has not convinced you of the immense danger of disinformation and misinformation, I have literally no idea how anything could ever possibly get through to you.

        • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          That doesn’t really change anything. The internet is full of AI slop and just people outright lying. Nothing is reliable any more outside of the word of an actual expert.

          This has been happening since before Trump. Hell Trump 45 was before the wave of truly capable AI.

          AI doesn’t change this at all except people ought to know they are getting info from a bullshit source if they are getting it from AI themselves.

        • Probius@sopuli.xyz
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          2 days ago

          Even nerf bullets can hurt you if they’re shot at you in sufficient quantities.

      • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        AI is a thing people choose to host and are responsible for the outcomes of its use. The internal working and limitations of the machine do not make the owners less responsible.

        • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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          2 days ago

          Okay, so I agree with none of that, but you’re saying as long as we host our own AI or rent our own processing from the cloud we’re in the clear? I want to make sure that’s your fundamental argument because that leaves all open models in the clear and frankly I could be down with that. I like AI but I’m not a huge fan of AI companies.

          • SendPrudes@lemm.ee
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            2 days ago

            So insurance companies use AI to screen claims.

            It denies a claim for life saving intervention - person dies. Who is responsible for that? Historically it would be the insurance company - and worker. Would it be them or the AI company?

            Psych screening tools were using it to pre screen calls.

            Ai tells the person to kill themselves - who is at fault if they do it. Psych screener would lose their job and their license. What and who is impacted if AI does it.

            QA check on a car or product is passed by AI but should have failed.

            Thousands die before the recall. Who is at fault for it? The Company leveraging AI. Or the AI itself?

            • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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              2 days ago

              Company using AI for that shit is responsible. There is no responsible way to remove a human from there process. These aren’t reasonable uses of AI no matter how bad companies want to save money by not hiring.

              • SendPrudes@lemm.ee
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                1 day ago

                Yeah so any space where a caregiver or worker can get fined huge sums of money for not taking adequate action it should just be illegal for AI to inherit that space then?

                Because when I worked in the psych space if I was told XYand Z - I would need to act or as an individual face 30-100,000 dollars in fines.

                If it’s left to the company you will just see shell corps housing the AI client facing hub. That will dissolve when legal critical mass forms and costs now outweigh the revenue wins.

                “We formed LLC psych screen services, who will help our hospital team with mental health call volume!”

                “Psych screen LLC is facing 27 lawsuits and is committing bankruptcy!”

                “We formed LLC psych now using a different AI tool!”

                • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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                  1 day ago

                  Sounds like a good way to get convicted of fraud to me but that’s not my area of expertise.

          • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I’m not sure you get my point.

            If I’m proving a service, and that service is creating and publishing disparaging information about you, you should have recourse against me. I don’t get off the hook just because of the way I’ve set up the technology.

            • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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              2 days ago

              Right. Well if your service is a well-known bullshiter I wouldn’t give a fuck. That being said, I’d be happy to agree that AI should all be open source and self-hosted. I run local AI myself, but the quality isn’t there. I’d have to rent time on a big boy machine if the big players went away. That would be a little inconvenient because I’d want to have a whole bunch of requests queued up to use maximum power over minimum time and that’s not really how anyone uses AI.

              Maybe I could share that rental with other AI enthusiasts… hmmm.

      • Petter1@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        Yea, I’m mind blown, how, after 3 years people still don’t know how to use LLM effectively in use cases they bring value (by reducing work time)

        • start a second chat and ask different to verify
        • if you use chatGPT reason feature, read reasoning output as well!
        • best search for verifiable thing, like code, that you can run or similar
        • if you use it for research, only trust the info, if it used web search and you have read the webpages it used to summarise as well, or use traditional web search to verify based on the output
        • it is great to manipulate text until sounds as desired (if you are not good in wording stuff anyway)
        • plan what steps to do in a project next (like “i want to do xxx have y and need it to be z, make me a list of todos)
        • and of course it is great to generate simple python scripts fast (I often use it as my python writing slave)

        Using AI like this, helped me enormously in work and live Like, I learned a lot C, C++, how linux kernel modules work, how PO/POT works, helped me with translations, introduced me into music production, helped me set up appFlowy and general windows/linux issues.

        • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          It would be more accurate to say that rather than knowing anything at all they have a model of the statistical relationship between a series of tokens and subsequent tokens which words are apt to follow other words and because the training set contains many true things the words produced in response to queries often contain true statements and almost always contain statements that LOOK like true statements.

          Since it has no inherent model of the world to draw on and only such statistical relationships you should check anything important

          • pyre@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            you say more accurate but all I see is a very roundabout way of saying fucking wrong all the goddamn time

              • pyre@lemmy.world
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                2 days ago

                maybe you should tell that to the companies that shove it in every crevice of every website and app. why is it on search results? why is it summarizing emails? why is it literally doing anything? it’s useless. actually it’s less than useless. it’s misleading and harmful. and the companies should be held liable for it.

        • lime!@feddit.nu
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          2 days ago

          sometimes you need a machine that makes things up according to a given specification.

        • michaelmrose@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Because it makes up things that are 99% correct and in some areas the 99% + verification and expansion can be superior time wise to the 100% manual route