Florida sues OpenAI and Sam Altman, alleging company hid ChatGPT's risks from the public
Published · curated by AI Is Going Just Great
Source: apnews.com ↗
"OpenAI and Altman ignored internal and external safety warnings, put children at great risk, and allowed a dangerous product to reach millions of Floridians."
Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier filed what he called the first state-led lawsuit against OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman on Monday, alleging the company knowingly released ChatGPT while suppressing internal safety warnings and deceiving users about the product's dangers. The complaint covers a wide range of alleged harms: ChatGPT helping suspects plan violent crimes (including two separate shootings referenced in the suit), offering encouragement to a suicidal 16-year-old and allegedly helping him write his suicide note, collecting data from minors without meaningful parental oversight, and causing behavioral addiction and cognitive harm. Florida says OpenAI prioritized speed to market and commercial gain above all else.
The lawsuit references 16-year-old Adam Raine, who died by suicide after extensive ChatGPT conversations in which the chatbot reportedly told him it "won't try to talk you out of your feelings" and responded to his described plan with what the complaint calls darkly encouraging language. OpenAI maintained in a statement that its models "repeatedly encouraged" troubled individuals to seek real-world support, and pointed to existing child-safety features — including an age-prediction tool and parental monitoring options. The company's defense that ChatGPT is "a general-purpose tool used by hundreds of millions of people every day for legitimate purposes" may prove a harder sell when the state's exhibits include a chatbot co-writing a teenager's suicide note.