this post was submitted on 10 Jul 2023
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It makes sense, right?
They produced a language model. It does nothing more than predict the next word. It will lie all the time, that's part of how it works. It makes stuff up from the input it gets.
If you post that stuff online and it contains lies about people and you didn't check it, you absolutely should be liable for that. I don't see a problem with that.
Right, but what about the case where you post something that doesn't contain lies at all?
What if ChatGPT outputs something that a certain former president gets offended by and he decides to sue OpenAI?
According to their ToS it doesn't matter if it's a "frivolous lawsuit". If OpenAI had to pay any attorney fees just to respond to some ridiculous lawsuit, they could still bill you for those costs.
I don't think it makes sense at that point at all.
Of course the vast majority of users would never have to worry about this, but it's still something to be aware of.
It's a tool. Can't sue the manufacturer if you injure someone with it.
This isn't true in the least. Purchase a tool and look through the manual. Every section marked "danger", "warning", or "caution" was put in there because someone sued some company because the user or some bystander was hurt or injured.
You are right. Seems I confused common sense with reality.
You can if the tool is defective.
You ever heard of a product recall?