A group of Chinese users were helping the Chatzipi to create the AI tool to monitor social media. OpenAI has banned the accounts. The group used the ChatGP to edit the tool's code. The OpenAI said the information in a statement last Friday.
The group asked the ChatzPP to create a sales pitch for a program, which actually helped to describe the program interestingly for the purpose of marketing or selling the program. Through sales pitch, they wanted to highlight the programs and effectiveness of the program, so that it could attract users. The program was actually a surveillance tool, which helped to identify anti -Chinese attitudes or protests on social media (eg Facebook, X, YouTube, Instagram). The purpose of this group was to send this information to the Chinese government.
The OpenAI says, “This network was composed of the ChatzP's accounts that were originally followed by China's business time. Models were promoted in Chinese and the chatty tools were not an automatic program, but personally used. '
This group used the chattabot for verifying the accuracy of their collected information or proofreid. The information has been sent to the Chinese embassy and sent to intelligence officials. These intelligence officials were monitoring the movements of various countries including the United States, Germany, the United Kingdom.
OpenAI chief investigator Ben Neemo said OpenAI had found such AI tool for the first time. Using the AI model comes to us what they are doing in other parts of the Internet.
Most of the codes of the surveillance tool seem to have been based on an open-source version of the allama model of the metter. In addition, this group uses ChatzPi, writing phishing email for Chinese customers.
In addition, the OpenAI also said they had recently banned an account, which was creating social media posts against Chinese politician and refugee political scientist Kai Shea in the United States using ChatGPT. The same group made reports against the United States in the Spanish, which was published in the main section of Latin America. They were often published in the name of a person or Chinese company.
References: Engagazate
