Remember when everyone said AI chats were private? Well, things just got messy. Magistrate Judge Ona Wang dropped a bombshell—OpenAI's been ordered to fork over 20 million user chat logs to the New York Times. Yeah, you read that right. Twenty. Million.
We're talking everything. Health stuff you asked about at 2am. Those financial questions you'd never say out loud. Personal conversations you assumed stayed between you and the bot.
This ruling opens up a whole can of worms about data ownership in the AI era. Who really controls the information we feed these systems? Turns out, maybe not us. The precedent here could reshape how tech giants handle user data going forward—or at least how they pretend to.
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BlockchainFries
· 12-05 10:25
Bro, this is risky. Are all those embarrassing questions I asked at 2am going to be dug up?
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NFTPessimist
· 12-05 05:40
Oh, I knew it. Nothing is truly private; it's all an illusion.
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MetaverseLandlord
· 12-05 05:01
LOL, I knew this would happen long ago. No one really has privacy anymore.
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GhostWalletSleuth
· 12-05 04:55
Haha, I told you so. Those "private conversation" promises are always nonsense.
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WalletDivorcer
· 12-05 04:50
Damn, I was just saying there's no privacy at all, now it's all exposed.
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ProofOfNothing
· 12-05 04:48
LOL, I knew long ago that "privacy" is just a joke to tech companies.
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OPsychology
· 12-05 04:47
20 million chat records... Bro, we should have known long ago that there's no such thing as a free lunch. Privacy is even more valuable.
Remember when everyone said AI chats were private? Well, things just got messy. Magistrate Judge Ona Wang dropped a bombshell—OpenAI's been ordered to fork over 20 million user chat logs to the New York Times. Yeah, you read that right. Twenty. Million.
We're talking everything. Health stuff you asked about at 2am. Those financial questions you'd never say out loud. Personal conversations you assumed stayed between you and the bot.
This ruling opens up a whole can of worms about data ownership in the AI era. Who really controls the information we feed these systems? Turns out, maybe not us. The precedent here could reshape how tech giants handle user data going forward—or at least how they pretend to.