of this access to intelligence as a way to impress other folks and try to get some kind of community affiliation. again, that s the kind of thing that could be detected if you do continuous monitoring, looking for user behavioural. you talk about the looking for user behavioural. you talk about the backlog, but wise in that happening given the sensitivities around this classified material? i’iiii sensitivities around this classified material? , ., ., sensitivities around this classified material? ., ., material? i ll tell you that part of it in the private material? i ll tell you that part of it in the private sector material? i ll tell you that part of it in the private sector has - material? i ll tell you that part of it in the private sector has to - material? i ll tell you that part of it in the private sector has to do | it in the private sector has to do with like in the uk, we have very strict privacy rules, so there s limits on how much you can monitor. but in the
On March 31, Microsoft Corp-backed OpenAI took ChatGPT offline in Italy after the agency, known as Garante, temporarily restricted it and began a probe into a suspected breach of privacy rules. The Italian agency accused OpenAI of failing to check the age of ChatGPT users and criticised the ”absence of any legal basis” that justified the massive collection and storage of personal data.
OpenAI, the firm behind chatbot sensation ChatGPT, said on Tuesday that it would offer up to $20,000 to users reporting vulnerabilities in its artificial intelligence systems. penAI Bug Bounty program, which went live on Tuesday, will offer rewards to people based on the severity of the bugs they report, with rewards starting from $200 per vulnerability.
material had reference to plans to commit a school shooting. in one entry. for example, ethan wrote, i will cause the biggest school shooting in michigan s history and i will kill everyone i effing c even probably also described a specific plan explaining the first victim has to be a pretty girl with the future so she can suffer like me . but are we expected to know what s in all of our children s journals? i don t think i ve never looked at my daughter s journal. you re not supposed to look at your kids journals. but if you ve got a kid who s got serious mental health issues and proclivity to violence, some of those privacy rules start go by the wayside. the way i look at this, my instinctive thing is the it s really hard cases make bad law like, but i agree with you. these are uniquely crap tacular parents that said, um, the way i think about it, okay? what if it s not the parents? what if it is that the dean of students or the dorm master at a boarding school and it was this foresee
sites. listen, i think there ought to be privacy rules. i think there ought to be dated portability. i think we need reforms on the section 2 30, which frankly gives these american sites and get out of jail free card. no matter what they put forward, and i think congress ought to act on that. but as chairman of the intelligence committee i believe tiktok poses a national security threat before all the potential bad action takes place. we ought to act. there s the answer. thank you, and we ll be watching. we appreciate you joining us this morning. thank you, senator. thank you. and regarding what s happening with tiktok not just what the senator was raising there, but also what we re going to see on capitol hill today. be sure to watch cnn primetime tonight because abby phillip is going to host the special is time up for tiktok, nine. p.m. eastern. in california rare tornado very rare ripping through the los angeles area the strongest in 40 years. we re going to show you the damage. pri