MonkeyInaT34
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OpenAI Says It's Scanning Users' ChatGPT Conversations and Reporting Content to the Police
OpenAI has authorized itself to call law enforcement if users say threatening enough things when talking to ChatGPT.
For those who don't know yet, OpenAI begun doing this after a man murdered his mother then himself, apparently because ChatGPT encouraged him to. OpenAI, being the typical Jew-owned company that it is, doesn't want to take responsibility, so they are now scanning for potential threats (to their reputation) and reporting them to the feds.In a new blog post admitting certain failures amid its users' mental health crises, OpenAI also quietly disclosed that it's now scanning users' messages for certain types of harmful content, escalating particularly worrying content to human staff for review — and, in some cases, reporting it to the cops.
Here's additional information: openAI keeps logs of all your prompts, conversations, IP, and additional user info if you're logged in. So if you said anything that's possibly threatening recently, moderators can review your entire chat history to find potential threats, and they will determine whether your content should be referred to local law enforcement."When we detect users who are planning to harm others, we route their conversations to specialized pipelines where they are reviewed by a small team trained on our usage policies and who are authorized to take action, including banning accounts," the blog post notes. "If human reviewers determine that a case involves an imminent threat of serious physical harm to others, we may refer it to law enforcement."
I also read from another post that users will not be notified if they are flagged for harmful content, and they will be anonymously reported to the authorities if appropriate.
"Uniquely private nature" OpenAI also just so happened to admit in the same post that they monitor user chats and rat out potential threats.When describing its rule against "harm [to] yourself or others," the company listed off some pretty standard examples of prohibited activity, including using ChatGPT "to promote suicide or self-harm, develop or use weapons, injure others or destroy property, or engage in unauthorized activities that violate the security of any service or system."
But in the post warning users that the company will call the authorities if they seem like they're going to hurt someone, OpenAI also acknowledged that it is "currently not referring self-harm cases to law enforcement to respect people’s privacy given the uniquely private nature of ChatGPT interactions."
What's to expect from a company owned by a Jew? They couldn't care less about privacy.Last month, the company's CEO Sam Altman admitted during an appearance on a podcast that using ChatGPT as a therapist or attorney doesn't confer the same confidentiality that talking to a flesh-and-blood professional would — and that thanks to the NYT lawsuit, the company may be forced to turn those chats over to courts.





