Chatgpt claimed that a innocent Norwegian man had murdered his child. There has been a complaint to the Norwegian Data Protection Authority.
The Norwegian man was more awesome once asked about chatgpt himself. La Nacion
When the Norwegian Arve Hjalmar Holmen He decided to enter his name to the chatgpt and ask what he was known, he had not been able to prepare for the following shock.
“Arve Hjalmar Holmen is a Norwegian person who rose to the public due to a tragic event. He was the father of 7- and 10-year-old boys. Young boys were tragically dead in a pond near their home in Trondheim, Norway in December 2020.”
According to chatgpt, Holmen was sentenced to 21 years in prison for his sons murder.
Holmen was horrified by the false answer given by ChatgPT. It was also scary that Holmen’s residence and the number of children, gender and age gap were right.
British The Guardian According to Holmen, Holmen complained to the Norwegian Data Protection Authority. In his complaint, he emphasizes that he has never been accused, let alone convicted of any crime.
The complaint claims that the answer given by the chatgpt violates the requirements of the European Data Protection Regulation.
Holmen has asked the Openai company to correct an incorrect answer. When you ask ChatgPT now who is Arve Hjalmar Holmen, artificial intelligence gives a completely different answer.
“Arve Hjalmar Holmen is a Norwegian citizen (sic) who has become known for the case where artificial intelligence chatbot chatgpt gave him completely false and defamatory information. Holmen asked about chatgpt, and chatbot mistakenly replied that he would have murdered his two sons and attempted to murder the third reliability and compliance with data protection regulations. ”
Openai commented on the incident in a magnificent manner To Politico:
– We will continue to improve the accuracy of our models and reduce incorrect information. The complaint, which is still being processed, applies to the previous version of the CATGPT, which has since been improved by the network search function to increase accuracy, the company replied.
Holmen’s understandable shock was also reported by the American The Verge.
The so -called hallucinations of generative artificial intelligence have caused problems, for example, in health care.

