“We can be required” to show conversations with Chatbot, confirmed OpenAi CEO Sam Altman.
The warning comes from the Creator: Everything you say to your dear chatgPT can be used against you in court.
Sam Altman secured last week at one of the past Weekend podcast of comedian Theo Von that conversations with chatgPT are not protected by legal confidentiality and can be used as evidence in lawsuits.
OpenAi, creator of Chatbot who currently has 2.5 billion daily orders Worldwide, it is legally obliged to conserve the records of users’ conversations – including those that have been eliminated.
“If you talk to Chatgpt about your most sensitive issues and there is a lawsuit or something, we can be required to present it. And I think this is very problematic,” said Altman.
“At this point, if you talk to one, a lawyer or one about these problems, there is a legal privilege for this. There is a doctor-patient confidentiality, there is legal confidentiality, whatever. We don’t have this yet when it comes to chatgpt“He said.
“I think we should have the same concept of privacy for conversations with the AI we have with a therapist or something,” the CEO confessed.
Sam Altman tells Theo Von about how people use ChatGPT as a therapist and there needs to be new laws on chat history privacy:
“If you go talk to ChatGPT about your most sensitive stuff and then there’s a lawsuit, we could be required to produce that.”
— Bearly AI (@bearlyai)