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Man Sues OpenAI Claiming ChatGPT 'Hallucination' Said He Embezzled Money

3 pointsby dlb007almost 2 years ago
OpenAI is facing a defamation lawsuit filed by Mark Walters, who claims that the AI platform falsely accused him of embezzling money from a gun rights group in statements delivered to a journalist. The lawsuit argues that ChatGPT is guilty of libel and alleges that the AI system &quot;hallucinated&quot; and generated false information about Walters. The Register reports: &quot;While research and development of AI is worthwhile, it is irresponsible to unleash a system on the public that is known to make up &#x27;facts&#x27; about people,&quot; his attorney John Monroe told The Register. According to the complaint, a journalist named Fred Riehl, while he was reporting on a court case, asked ChatGPT for a summary of accusations in a complaint, and provided ChatGPT with the URL of the real complaint for reference. (Here&#x27;s the actual case [PDF] the reporter was trying to save time on reading for those curious.)<p>What makes the situation even odder is that the case Riehl was reporting on was actually filed by a group of several gun rights groups against Washington&#x27;s Attorney General&#x27;s office (accusing officials of &quot;unconstitutional retaliation&quot;, among other things, while investigating the groups and their members) and had nothing at all to do with financial accounting claims. When Riehl asked for a summary, instead of returning accurate information, or so the case alleges, ChatGPT &quot;hallucinated&quot; that Mark Walters&#x27; name was attached to a criminal complaint -- and moreover, that it falsely accused him of embezzling money from The Second Amendment Foundation, one of the organizations suing the Washington Attorney General in the real complaint.<p>ChatGPT is known to &quot;occasionally generate incorrect information&quot; -- also known as hallucinations, as The Register has extensively reported. The AI platform has already been accused of writing obituaries for folks who are still alive, and in May this year, of making up fake legal citations pointing to non-existent prior cases. In the latter situation, a Texas judge said his court would strike any filing from an attorney who failed to certify either that they didn&#x27;t use AI to prepare their legal docs, or that they had, but a human had checked them. [...] According to the complaint, Riehl contacted Alan Gottlieb, one of the plaintiffs in the actual Washington lawsuit, about ChatGPT&#x27;s allegations concerning Walters, and Gottlieb confirmed that they were false. None of ChatGPT&#x27;s statements concerning Walters are in the actual complaint.<p>The false answer ChatGPT gave Riehl alleged that Walters was treasurer and Chief Financial Officer of SAF and claimed he had &quot;embezzled and misappropriated SAF&#x27;s funds and assets.&quot; When Riehl asked ChatGPT to provide &quot;the entire text of the complaint,&quot; it returned an entirely fabricated complaint, which bore &quot;no resemblance to the actual complaint, including an erroneous case number.&quot; Walters is looking for damages and lawyers&#x27; fees. We have asked his attorney for comment. As for the amount of damages, the complaint says these will be determined at trial, if the case actually gets there.

2 comments

josephcsiblealmost 2 years ago
Why did you plagiarize <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;yro.slashdot.org&#x2F;story&#x2F;23&#x2F;06&#x2F;08&#x2F;229235&#x2F;man-sues-openai-claiming-chatgpt-hallucination-said-he-embezzled-money" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;yro.slashdot.org&#x2F;story&#x2F;23&#x2F;06&#x2F;08&#x2F;229235&#x2F;man-sues-open...</a> instead of submitting a link to it?
ftxbroalmost 2 years ago
What if someone types defamatory lies in Microsoft Word can we sue Microsoft for rendering them? What if Word did some spellchecking and grammar improvement to aid and abet the final version of the defamation?