Yeah let's be really specific. Look at the poem in the article. The poem does not mention suicide.
(I'd cut and paste it here, but it's haunting and some may find it upsetting. I know I did. As many do, I've got some personal experiences there. Friends lost, etc.)
In this tragic context it clearly alludes to suicide.
But the poem only literally mentions goodbyes, and a long sleep. It seems highly possible and highly likely to me that Gordon asked ChatGPT for a poem with those specific (innocuous on their own) elements - sleep, goodbyes, the pylon, etc.
Gordon could have simply told ChatGPT that he was dying naturally of an incurable disease and wanted help writing a poetic goodbye. Imagine (god forbid) that you were in such a situation, looking for help planning your own goodbyes and final preparations, and all the available tools prevented you from getting help because you might be lying about your incurable cancer and might be suicidal instead. And that's without even getting into the fact that assisted voluntary euthanasia is legal in quite a few countries.
My bias here is pretty clear: I don't think legally crippling LLMs is generally the right tack. But on the other hand, I am also not defending ChatGPT because we don't know his entire interaction history with it.
Yeah let's be really specific. Look at the poem in the article. The poem does not mention suicide.
(I'd cut and paste it here, but it's haunting and some may find it upsetting. I know I did. As many do, I've got some personal experiences there. Friends lost, etc.)
In this tragic context it clearly alludes to suicide.
But the poem only literally mentions goodbyes, and a long sleep. It seems highly possible and highly likely to me that Gordon asked ChatGPT for a poem with those specific (innocuous on their own) elements - sleep, goodbyes, the pylon, etc.
Gordon could have simply told ChatGPT that he was dying naturally of an incurable disease and wanted help writing a poetic goodbye. Imagine (god forbid) that you were in such a situation, looking for help planning your own goodbyes and final preparations, and all the available tools prevented you from getting help because you might be lying about your incurable cancer and might be suicidal instead. And that's without even getting into the fact that assisted voluntary euthanasia is legal in quite a few countries.
My bias here is pretty clear: I don't think legally crippling LLMs is generally the right tack. But on the other hand, I am also not defending ChatGPT because we don't know his entire interaction history with it.