A Norwegian man after Chatgpt He mistakenly accused him of killing his children, he asked Openai to remove this misconception.
According to published reports, Arrow Yalmar Holman decided to investigate what ChatGpt’s name was searching for others. But he found out that Openai’s artificial intelligence chats nominated him as “a 21 -year -old offender who killed his two children and tried to kill his third son”.
The Norwegian complaint has been filed by Noyb, the EU digital law defenders.
Violating EU laws by ChatGpt
According to Noyb, ChatGPT artificial intelligence has not only forged events that never happened, but also combined personal information such as the number and gender of Holman’s children and his hometown with fake information.
The ChatGPT move, which includes “real elements” of the Norwegian man’s personal life, has violated the public’s claim to protect the EU Data (GDPR) because Holman cannot correct this information.
Of course, ChatGPT does not appear to be wrong about Holman. It seems that the recent update has resolved this problem, as ChatGPT is now searching for the Internet when asking for people. But since Openai had previously stated that it could not correct information and can only block them, the fake story of the murder of children is probably still available in ChatGPT internal data. Noyb claims that this is a violation of GDPR until Holman fails to correct it.
Holman, of course, is not the only ChatGpt user to face this problem. A few months after the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, an Australian mayor threatened to complain to Openai after the chats have fallen in jail. A few months later, a radio presenter sued Openai on fake charges on ChatGPT embezzlement.
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