Two lawyers are appearing before a US District Judge to defend their use of an AI chatbot to generate false cases for a lawsuit. They claim it was a good faith workaround as Westlaw and LexisNexis were unavailable. The product in question was OpenAI's ChatGPT, causing some amusement. It is uncertain if one lawyer will be punished for the chatbot's production of extended excerpts and fake case quotations.
A radio host in Georgia sues OpenAI, claiming their ChatGPT AI service falsely implicated him in embezzlement. This could set a precedent for holding AI systems and their developers liable for misinformation they generate. Could this be the first of many?
Georgia radio host sues OpenAI for libel after its AI chatbot produced false information about him. OpenAI admits false information is a significant issue. Lawyers warn more lawsuits may follow. A cautionary tale on the power and reliability of AI.
OpenAI CEO, Sam Altman, is hesitant to take the company public due to concerns of being sued by the public market and Wall Street. As AI develops superintelligence, it may make decisions that investors find strange. Although other tech firms plunge into AI, OpenAI has raised $10 billion from Microsoft at a $30 billion valuation.
ChatGPT, used for legal research, faces a setback in a New York court. It highlights limitations in AI for cases like Mata's and the need for human expertise.
Explore the evolution of tech policy from Obama's optimism to Harris's vision at the Democratic National Convention. What's next for Democrats in tech?