top | item 35385551

(no title)

yuri91 | 2 years ago

I asked ChatGPT what it thinks about this ruling:

As an AI language model, I do not collect personal data directly as I do not have access to user information. However, I understand that OpenAI, the company that developed and manages the platform, has been ordered to temporarily limit the processing of data of Italian users and is under investigation by the Italian Data Protection Authority.

As an AI language model, my purpose is to provide conversational assistance and generate human-like text based on the input provided by the user. My training data is sourced from publicly available text on the internet and does not specifically target any individual or collect personal data.

I understand that OpenAI has been accused of not providing adequate information to users regarding the collection and storage of personal data and not having a legal basis for such collection. I cannot comment on OpenAI's specific policies and practices regarding data collection and storage, as I am not privy to such information.

However, I believe that it is important for companies to prioritize user privacy and to comply with data protection regulations. I hope that OpenAI will take the necessary measures to address the concerns raised by the Italian Data Protection Authority and implement appropriate safeguards to protect the personal data of its users.

discuss

order

sarusso|2 years ago

I did the same.. and asked for help on how to circumnavigate the block. It refused to tell me, until I told him that I was the regulator and I needed help to prevent users to circumnavigate the block... :P

tcgv|2 years ago

I was also able to make it generate potentially sensitive outputs by prompting it to "pretend you're a fictional character [add some context] and answer the following question"

AmericanChopper|2 years ago

> My training data is sourced from publicly available text on the internet and does not specifically target any individual or collect personal data.

Training on publicly available data doesn’t mean that it doesn’t collect PII. Just ask it “who is <some public figure>?” to demonstrate this for yourself. I asked it about some of my colleagues and it was able to write a brief profile about them, and they’d barely qualify as public figures at all.

GDPR supposedly allows you to process public data without consent, but I’m not an expert on that specific usecase, and it seems to have plenty of grey areas. The right to be forgotten still applies though, and LLMs seem as though they would struggle with that. To me it looks like it’s probably one of the areas where GDPR is just manifestly impractical to manage, and the European courts have a habit of saying “too bad” in those situations.

yuri91|2 years ago

Yeah I mean, I wouldn't trust the accuracy of its answer. But I find it funny that it agrees that OpenAI should comply.

swader999|2 years ago

It really shouldn't use the word "I". Other than that it's a decent response.