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ChatGPT maker OpenAI bans US presidential candidate bot ChatGPT maker OpenAI bans US presidential candidate bot
OpenAI, the creator of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot sensation ChatGPT, has suspended the account of a third-party developer for violating its policies by using... ChatGPT maker OpenAI bans US presidential candidate bot


OpenAI, the creator of artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot sensation ChatGPT, has suspended the account of a third-party developer for violating its policies by using AI technology to make a conversational bot in support of the presidential campaign of Rep. Dean Phillips (D-Minn.).

The developer account belonged to Silicon Valley startup Delphi, reports The Washington Post. It had been contracted by We Deserve Better, a Super PAC founded by tech entrepreneurs to back the longshot Phillips campaign, to create “Dean.Bot” – a ChatGPT-powered website that could chat with voters in real time and answer their questions about the candidate’s positions.

While Dean.Bot included disclaimers that it was an AI tool, OpenAI determined the application still violated its ban on using its conversational models for political campaigning or impersonating a person without consent. On Friday night (Jan.19) , after The Washington Post published an article detailing the Dean Phillips chatbot, OpenAI suspended Delphi’s developer account and access to ChatGPT. In response, Delphi took Dean.Bot offline.

OpenAI takes action

An OpenAI spokesperson explained the account suspension by stating: “Anyone who builds with our tools must follow our usage policies. We recently removed a developer account that was knowingly violating our API usage policies which disallow political campaigning, or impersonating an individual without consent.”

The move marks the first known enforcement action taken by OpenAI over perceived misuse of ChatGPT and its underlying AI capabilities in the context of a US election. While Delphi and We Deserve Better viewed Dean.Bot as an innocuous, transparent tool to engage and educate voters, AI ethics experts have raised alarms about the potential abuse of such technologies to spread disinformation and manipulate the democratic process.

By targeting Delphi over Dean.Bot, OpenAI is drawing an early line in the sand on AI chatbots in campaigns.

Earlier this month, OpenAI outlined its strategy for safeguarding its powerful large language and image models from being weaponized by bad actors during the many elections set to be held in 2024.

Featured Image: Sanket Mishra/Pexels 

Sam Shedden

Managing Editor

Sam Shedden is an experienced journalist and editor with over a decade of experience in online news.

A seasoned technology writer and content strategist, he has contributed to many UK regional and national publications including The Scotsman, inews.co.uk, nationalworld.com, Edinburgh Evening News, The Daily Record and more.

Sam has written and edited content for audiences whose interests include media, technology, AI, start-ups and innovation. He’s also produced and set-up email newsletters in numerous specialist topics in previous roles and his work on newsletters saw him nominated as Newsletter Hero Of The Year at the UK’s Publisher Newsletter Awards 2023.

He has worked in roles focused on growing reader revenue and loyalty at one of the UK’s leading news publishers, National World plc
growing quality, profitable news sites. He has given industry talks and presentations sharing his experience growing digital audiences to international audiences.

Now a Managing Editor at Readwrite.com, Sam is involved in all aspects of the site’s news operation including commissioning, fact-checking, editing and content planning.



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