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SYDNEY —
A mayor in Australia’s Victoria state said Friday he may sue
the artificial intelligence writing tool ChatGPT after it falsely claimed
he’d served time in prison for bribery.
Hepburn Shire Council Mayor Brian Hood was incorrectly identified as
the guilty party in a corruption case in the early 2000s.
Brian Hood was the whistleblower in a corruption scandal
involving a company partly owned by the Reserve Bank of Australia.
Several people were charged, but Hood was not one of them.
Hood said that if OpenAI, a U.S.-based company that owns the chatbot,
does not correct the false claims, he will sue.
; 호주의 시장인 브라이언 후드는 ChatGPT의 소유주인 OpenAI를 상대로
소송 할 것이라고 말했다.
후드 시장은 자신이 뇌물죄로 수감되었다는 오정보를 ChatGPT가 공개했으며,
이 오정보를 OpenAI가 수정하지 않으면 소송하겠다고 말했다.
It would be the first defamation lawsuit against the automated service.
Hood’s lawyers say that the defamatory material, which damages
the mayor’s reputation, still exists and their efforts to have the mistakes
rectified would continue.
A disclaimer on the ChatGPT program warns users that
it "may produce inaccurate information about people, places, or facts”.
; 이 사건은 ChatGPT에 의한 최초의 명예훼손 사례인데,
ChatGPT는 부정확한 정보를 제공할 수 있다는 부정적 시각도 있다.
Google has announced the launch of its rival to ChatGPT, Bard.
Meta, which owns WhatsApp, Facebook and Instagram, launched
its own AI chatbot Blenderbot in the United States last year,
while Baidu, the Chinese tech company, has said it was working on
an advanced version of its chatbot, Ernie.
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