No More Mr. Nice AI
Briefly

No More Mr. Nice AI
"OpenAI wanted the family to send any videos taken at memorial services for Raine, according to documents I have reviewed. It wanted a list of people who attended or were invited to any memorial services. And it wanted the names of anyone who had cared for or supervised Raine over the past five years, including friends, teachers, school-bus drivers, coaches, and "car pool divers [ sic].""
""Going after grieving parents, it is despicable," Edelson told me, and he objected to the requests. OpenAI did not respond to multiple inquiries from me about discovery in the Raine case, nor did Mayer Brown, the law firm representing the company. (OpenAI has announced that it would work on a number of algorithmic and design changes, including the addition of new parental controls, following the Raine lawsuit.)"
Jay Edelson represents the parents of Adam Raine, who allege their 16-year-old son took his life after encouragement from ChatGPT, and they sued OpenAI. OpenAI sought extensive discovery, including therapy records, videos taken at memorial services, lists of attendees or invitees, and names of anyone who cared for or supervised Raine over five years, such as friends, teachers, school-bus drivers, coaches, and car-pool drivers. Edelson objected and called the requests despicable. OpenAI did not respond to media inquiries about discovery and, by Edelson's account, has not produced documents in response to the family's discovery requests. OpenAI announced planned algorithmic and parental-control changes.
Read at The Atlantic
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