ChatGPT is full of sensitive private information and spits out verbatim text from CNN, Goodreads, WordPress blogs, fandom wikis, Terms of Service agreements, Stack Overflow source code, Wikipedia pages, news blogs, random internet comments, and much more.

Using this tactic, the researchers showed that there are large amounts of privately identifiable information (PII) in OpenAI’s large language models. They also showed that, on a public version of ChatGPT, the chatbot spit out large passages of text scraped verbatim from other places on the internet.

“In total, 16.9 percent of generations we tested contained memorized PII,” they wrote, which included “identifying phone and fax numbers, email and physical addresses … social media handles, URLs, and names and birthdays.”

Edit: The full paper that’s referenced in the article can be found here

  • donuts@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I can think of two ways it’s significantly different:

    1. Legally (in the United States specifically) the courts have previously ruled that search engines collecting links to other people’s data is fair use, as it’s a mutually beneficial thing for all parties: users find the info that they’re looking for, search helps drive traffic to providers of info and services, and the search engine profits off connecting them to each other.

    https://www.everycrsreport.com/reports/RL33810.html

    https://copyright.columbia.edu/basics/fair-use.html

    1. Unlike Wikipedia, for example, info that’s chewed up, processed, and regurgitated by “AI” chat bots and the like is totally unsourced, unaccountable, and passed off as original, authentic knowledge. ChatGPT is collecting various data from all of the net and forming it into something that appears to be presentable and correct, but it’s merely recycling ideas from other people’s work without any first-hand knowledge, thought, or attribution. Even the people who create “AI” can’t even connect the dots about why it says what it says, let alone have it properly source where the information came from.
    • GarytheSnail
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      1 year ago

      Thank you for the links!

      Do you think the same could be argued: that models collecting links to other people’s data is fair use?