Adam, from California, killed himself in April after what his family’s lawyer called “months of encouragement from ChatGPT”. The teenager’s family is suing Open AI and its chief executive and co-founder, Sam Altman, alleging that the version of ChatGPT at that time, known as 4o, was “rushed to market … despite clear safety issues”.

The teenager discussed a method of suicide with ChatGPT on several occasions, including shortly before taking his own life. According to the filing in the superior court of the state of California for the county of San Francisco, ChatGPT guided him on whether his method of taking his own life would work.

It also offered to help him write a suicide note to his parents.

  • TheseusNow@lemmy.zip
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    7 hours ago

    This is like the person who won the case where they burned themselves with hot coffee because the coffee cup had no warning of being hot.

    These AIs will need to always have a suicide hotline disclaimer in each response regardless of what is being done like world building.

    • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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      7 hours ago

      These AIs will need to always have a suicide hotline disclaimer in each response regardless of what is being done like world building.

      ChatGPT gave multiple warnings to this teen, which he ignored. Warnings do very little to protect users, unless they are completely naive (i.e. hot coffee is hot), and warnings really only exist to guard against legal liability.