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    You are at:Home » China’s AI surveillance? OpenAI bans accounts using ChatGPT for social media monitoring
    Technology

    China’s AI surveillance? OpenAI bans accounts using ChatGPT for social media monitoring

    ONS EditorBy ONS EditorFebruary 22, 2025No Comments2 Mins Read0 Views
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    ChatGPT maker OpenAI says it has banned several accounts from China that attempted to write sales pitches and debug code for a suspected social media surveillance company. According to a report published by OpenAI, the banned accounts were using ChatGPT to promote and augment an AI assistant capable of collecting real-time data and reports on anti-China protests in the US, UK and other Western countries, which were later passed on to Chinese authorities.

    OpenAI says (via Bloomberg) that by publishing these cases it aims to shed light on how “authoritarian regimes may try to leverage US-built AI, democratic AI, against the US and allied countries, as well as their own people.”

    Ben Nimmo, a principal investigator for OpenAI, was quoted by Bloomberg as saying, “This is a pretty troubling glimpse into the way one non-democratic actor tried to use democratic or US-based AI for non-democratic purposes, according to the materials they were generating themselves,”

    The Microsoft-backed AI startup noted that the accounts in the network also used other AI models to develop their code, including a version of Meta’s Llama. Meta reportedly said that if its service was involved, it was likely one of many AI models, including Chinese offerings.

    What were these banned accounts doing? 

    The banned accounts reportedly used software called “Qianyue Overseas Public Opinion AI Assistant” to send surveillance reports to Chinese authorities, intelligence agents and Chinese embassy staff. The software is said to be specifically tailored to identifying online conversations in Western countries related to human rights demonstrations in China.

    According to the threat report published by OpenAI, it is against the company’s policy to use its AI for communications surveillance or unauthorised monitoring of individuals, including “on behalf of governments and authoritarian regimes that seek to suppress personal freedoms and rights”.

    Meanwhile, in a statement on the matter to Bloomberg, Meta said that there is a growing availability of AI models globally, and the restrictive AI models may not matter much to bad actors given that China is already investing heavily in its AI programme. The company said, “China is already investing more than a trillion dollars to surpass the US technologically, and Chinese tech companies are releasing their own open AI models as fast as companies in the US,”

    The US government has previously raised concerns about China using artificial intelligence to spread misinformation, repress its population and undermine the security of US and its allies.



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