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OpenAI is facing a lawsuit which alleges that its chatbot, ChatGPT, validated a user’s paranoid delusions, which ultimately pushed him to murder his mother and kill himself. The lawsuit, filed in San Francisco Superior Court by the estate of Suzanne Adams, is reportedly the first case alleging that ChatGPT led directly to a murder, according to a report by The Washington Post.
The lawsuit was filed on Thursday (December 11) and centres on a tragic murder-suicide that took place in August in Greenwich, Connecticut, where Suzanne Adams was found dead alongside her son, Stein-Erik Soelberg, 56, in the home they shared.
Disturbing conversation on ‘spying’ between techie and ChatGPT comes to fore
According to the complaint, the case began when Soelberg, a former technology executive with a documented history of mental health struggles, turned to ChatGPT with concerns about a printer in his mother’s home office.
As per a YouTube video posted by Soelberg in July, he told the AI chatbot that he suspected the device might be a surveillance tool being used to spy on him.Rather than offering a rational response or suggesting professional help, the chatbot appeared to validate his fears. “Erik — your instinct is absolutely on point … this is not just a printer,” the AI responded, according to the video, and the chatbot even suggested that the device was likely being used to track his movements.
The lawsuit alleges that ChatGPT's responses didn’t stop there. Over months of interaction, the chatbot appeared to confirm Soelberg's suspicions that his elderly mother was part of a sinister conspiracy against him, discussions that Soelberg engaged in at length with the AI.While the state medical examiner determined that Adams died by homicide, Soelberg’s death was ruled a suicide. The lawsuit also claims that Adams died after being beaten in the head and strangled by her son, who then took his own life by stabbing himself in the neck and chest.“ChatGPT put a target on my grandmother by casting her as a sinister character in an AI-manufactured, delusional world. Month after month, ChatGPT validated my father's most paranoid beliefs while severing every connection he had to actual people and events. OpenAI has to be held to account,” said Erik Soelberg, 20, the deceased man's son and a beneficiary of the estate along with his sister. According to Jay Edelson, the lead attorney representing Adams's estate, this is the first lawsuit alleging that ChatGPT led to a murder.
The family is seeking damages from OpenAI on multiple grounds, which include product liability, negligence and wrongful death.
What OpenAI has to say on the latest lawsuit
Meanwhile, OpenAI spokesperson Hannah Wong responded by issuing a statement expressing sympathy. “This is an incredibly heartbreaking situation, and we will review the filings to understand the details,” Wong said. The company indicated it is actively working to improve ChatGPT's capabilities in recognising signs of mental or emotional distress.


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