this post was submitted on 23 Oct 2024
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This is a really sad story, but it's also a story of parental neglect. Why did this kid with mental health issues have unrestricted internet access? Why did he have access to his stepfather's gun?
Those aren't the fault of some chatbot.
Penguinz0 just released a video about it and I have to admit that the character.ai AI are disturbingly convincing. They keep arguing they are real persons and, for vulnerable peole, you can get lost.
Definitely some gross negligence from the AI platform here in my honest opinion. It's easy to put some guardrails when you make a chatbot, but they didn't.
Btw, you don't know what the parents did and did not to help their son. I don't know either. So it's better to give them the benefit of the doubt.
Edit: I'm not an American and I would never understand why anyone would own guns.
But at the end of the day it's "art" (shitty, copyright infringing, yes.), Or at minimum "media". When has other media been "grossly negligent" or generally responsible for the acts of the consumers? Aggressive/emotional books or music certainly has joined folks at the moment of their self inflicted demise. Violent video games have certainly been "on the shelf" for some who commit horrible violence. We don't blame those media for causing what the users do...
Edit to be clear I'm not suggesting mentally unstable folks can't be seriously impacted by the content they consume. Or that that isn't a serious issue.
But if a chatbot is held liable for the actions of a user, why wouldn't a song about ending your life be held to the same standard? I would hope it's not.
I see you point and I agree. It's not all black and white.
I don't pretend to know the solution to this dilemma but hopefully this whole sad situation might trigger the conversation towards one.