ChatGPT hat ohne Zustimmung „riesige Mengen“ an Daten von Kanadiern gesammelt, sagen Datenschutzbeauftragte

https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/chatgpt-collected-vast-amounts-of-canadians-data-without-consent-privacy-commissioners-say/article_8bcc9e31-0177-4425-ab84-4c6a1ddb86cf.html?utm_source=Twitter&utm_medium=SocialMedia

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21 Kommentare

  1. Chrristoaivalis on

    You would think this would get Carney and the Liberals to question their faith in AI, but I don’t think it will

  2. Front_Musician_1117 on

    The company who openly scanned, and used public/private data across the web, without any regard to data usage etc. can do this only.

    You can’t publish anything without quoting sources to be trusted with anything, or worst slammed with copywrites.

    OpenAI, the oxymoron itself, used everything everyone never consented for years and here we are…

  3. willworkforgames on

    I suspect we need to adopt GDPR commission and fine just as high if we are serious about protecting data privacy.

  4. landlord-eater on

    Corporations will without exception always do the most evil thing possible if it makes money. It’s built in. 

  5. I’m so glad Canada as a GDRP so we have a right to delete our personal data.. oh wait

  6. Just assume you’re using a service online they’re scrapping all the data possible from you.

  7. Strict_Common6871 on

    Liberals are trying hard to distract from bill C-22. ChatGPT is voluntarily, don’t use it and your data is not collected. Bill C-22 is not.

  8. ifuaguyugetsauced on

    Is anyone surprised. Facebook has done this and paid a slap on the wrist fine. I bet many many many other huge companies do this because the benefit outweighs the consequence 10 fold. This will continue to keep happening. As they say “it’s the cost of business” 

  9. Muted_Carry7583 on

    Because Liberal is busy with supporting foreign entity and engaging in infighting domestically, rather than investing into technology of future. Canadians were behind the foundation of Gen AI today but Canada failed to commercialize it 

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