OpenAI Says ChatGPT refused to help Chinese influence operations
The Straits Times
The startup has also identified misdeeds of romance scams targeting Indonesians. Read more at straitstimes.com.
OpenAI said its ChatGPT AI service refused to assist an individual associated with Chinese law enforcement in planning an online campaign to discredit Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi.
In its latest update on disrupting malicious uses of artificial intelligence, the San Francisco-based start-up detailed requests by the user that included editing status reports on a wider net of covert influence operations against domestic and foreign adversaries.
OpenAI interpreted the evidence it gathered as indicative of a “large-scale, resource-intensive and sustained” effort by Chinese law enforcement to suppress dissent.
“I’m not familiar with what you mentioned and do not see any basis for this accusation,” Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning said at a regular news conference on Feb 26.
The announcement comes on the heels of archrival Anthropic PBC’s decision to loosen its hallmark commitment to AI guardrails, even as it resists pressure from the US Department of Defense about dropping such safeguards.
OpenAI on Feb 25 said it identified a series of misdeeds that included romance scams targeting Indonesians, a social media content farm linked to Russia and more accounts deemed likely to have originated in China seeking information from US officials.

BERLIN, March 23 - The leaders of Germany's centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) said on Monday the party needed to push ahead with promised reforms to tax and social welfare following the \"catastrophic\" loss in the state election in Rhineland-Palatinate at the weekend. Read more at straitstimes.com.












