Canada summons OpenAI officials on use of chatbot by shooter who killed 8

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Canada summons OpenAI officials on use of chatbot by shooter who killed 8

Canadian officials have summoned officials from OpenAI Tuesday for a meeting following revelations that the company did not inform authorities about a user whose account had been suspended months before she committed a mass murder in British Columbia on Feb 10.

The country's minister of artificial intelligence, Evan Solomon, has sought explanations about safety protocols and thresholds for when information is passed on to the police.Solomon said he was "deeply disturbed" by what he had learned of the company's actions involving Jesse Van Rootselaar, the 18-year-old who authorities say killed eight people in the rural community of Tumbler Ridge, British Columbia before killing herself. Van Rootselaar displayed a fascination with weapons and extreme violence, according to a review of her social media accounts by NYT, and documented her experiences with mental health issues. Messages sent by Van Rootselaar to her ChatGPT chatbot raised flags internally at OpenAI last June, according to the company.After the company's abuse detection system, which uses automated tools and investigations by staff members, picked up on concerning messages from her account, Van Rootselaar was banned from the platform, the company said.

Van Rootselaar's use of ChatGPT before the shooting was first reported by Wall Street Journal.OpenAI said it had considered informing law enforcement about the shooter's account but ultimately decided not to do so because the company determined that there was no credible planning on the part of the user. OpenAI says it tries to balance public safety against protecting the privacy of users. It says it also wants to avoid being overly aggressive about issuing warnings that could lead law enforcement officials showing up unannounced at a user's home. But the company's decision not to reach out to authorities raised concerns among some employees. OpenAI said it did contact the Royal Canadian Mounted Police with information about Rootselaar's account activity after the company learned of the mass shooting.

The police is seeking an order to force relevant digital platforms and AI firms to preserve potential evidence in the case.

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