Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago - The Wall Street Journal
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal
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Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal
OpenAI did not mention Tumbler Ridge shooter’s posts in meeting with B.C. officials day after mass shooting: province The Globe and Mail

Exclusive reports reveal that OpenAI employees had raised alarms about the Canada shooting suspect months before the incident.

The company said, in response to questions from CBC News, that Jesse Van Rootselaar's account was detected via automated tools and human investigations that "identify misuses of our models in furtherance of violent activities."
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal

OpenAI banned the ChatGPT account of the Tumbler Ridge shooting suspect, stating that the account's activity did not meet the threshold to flag it to authorities when it was identified.
OpenAI considered notifying Canadian police about concerning ChatGPT conversations from a user who later became a suspect in a deadly school shooting, but ultimately decided against it despite internal concerns over references to gun violence.
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal

Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal
Exclusive | OpenAI Employees Raised Alarms About Canada Shooting Suspect Months Ago The Wall Street Journal