The French Data Protection Authority (CNIL) has just announced that it has received two complaints about the artificial intelligence (AI) application ChatGPT.
According to the complaint, customers were not asked to agree to any terms of use or privacy policy when signing up for ChatGPT accounts, and customers found personal information when asking ChatGPT for their records. Authorities in several European countries including France, Ireland, Germany and Italy are moving to monitor the app.
Meanwhile, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada (OPCC) has decided to open an investigation into OpenAI, the owner of the ChatGPT application, after receiving complaints about the collection, use and disclosure of personal information without the consent of users.
In Australia, OpenAI is also facing a lawsuit over a ChatGPT story that claimed a Victorian mayor had been “jailed for bribery.” This could be the first lawsuit against the popular American tech company’s automated speech application for “defamation.”
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