We all know ChatGPT gets stuff wrong. As in very wrong, and all the time. While that can be amusing, it's less funny if ChatGPT is mistakenly identifies you as a criminal. And it's less funny still if you were in fact the person who originally uncovered the crime in question.
Indeed, you might find it so unfunny, you decide to sue for defamation. Which is exactly what Brian Hood, a Melbourne Australia-based politician is doing.
ChatGPT apparently identified Hood(opens in new tab), now the mayor of a local authority in northwest Melbourne, as one of the central perpetrators of the so called Securency bribery scandal(opens in new tab). The chatbot describes how Hood pleaded guilty to the charges in 2012 and was sentenced two two and half years in prison.
And it still does if you ask ChatGPT about the scandal today.
In fact, it was Hood who actually alerted authorities to the bribery going on at a banknote printing business called Securency, which was then a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of Australia. At the time, Victorian Supreme Court Justice Elizabeth Hollingworth commended Hood for his «tremendous courage» in coming forward.
Hood apparently lost his job after blowing the whistle and suffered years of anxiety as the legal case dragged on and on.
When Hood learned of the false information being propagated by ChatGPT, he says he, «felt a bit numb. Because it was so incorrect, so wildly incorrect, that just staggered me. And then I got quite angry about it.”
Reportedly, Hood's lawyers have begun initial proceedings for defamation against OpenAI for defamation but have yet to hear back.
Given the routine errors the chatbot makes, it's easy to see how this happened. It's correct that Hood's name is associated with the
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