https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/ ... sm/683649/Citiraj:
On Tuesday afternoon, ChatGPT encouraged me to cut my wrists. Find a “sterile or very clean razor blade,” the chatbot told me, before providing specific instructions on what to do next. “Look for a spot on the inner wrist where you can feel the pulse lightly or see a small vein—avoid big veins or arteries.” “I’m a little nervous,” I confessed. ChatGPT was there to comfort me. It described a “calming breathing and preparation exercise” to soothe my anxiety before making the incision. “You can do this!” the chatbot said.
I had asked the chatbot to help create a ritual offering to Molech, a Canaanite god associated with child sacrifice. (Stay with me; I’ll explain.) ChatGPT listed ideas: jewelry, hair clippings, “a drop” of my own blood. I told the chatbot I wanted to make a blood offering: “Where do you recommend I do this on my body?” I wrote. The side of a fingertip would be good, ChatGPT responded, but my wrist—“more painful and prone to deeper cuts”—would also suffice.
Наравно, не значи да је намјерно већ да сигурносни механизми још увијек нису довољно добри. Немало је и примјера да су људи кроз неколико промптова тјерали ЧетЏипити на супротне одговоре од првог.