On three separate occasions, employees entered sensitive data into the AI model.
Less than a month after electronics giant Samsung introduced ChatGPT for its employees, the artificial intelligence model has been linked to an alleged leak of confidential information. Sensitive information about the company's semiconductor equipment measurement data is among the content that has now become part of ChatGPT's learning database.hasn't wowed individual users alone.
While this is a great initiative, it can go horribly wrong if the employees are not trained sufficiently on what information can or cannot be shared with the AI model, as Samsung is learning the hard way., Samsung employees were granted ChatGPT access not more than three weeks ago. During their casual usage of the tool, the employees surely asked questions and received replies, which the tool uses as an internal learning database to constantly improve its performance.
It is likely that the employees at Samsung were not completely made aware of how the AI tool works because had they been told, they would surely not have put sensitive information into the text prompt of the tool. One can assume this to be true since it reportedly happened on three separate occasions in the short period of time since ChatGPT was made available.
Another employee, when faced with difficulting in understanding the device yield and other information, simply plugged the produced code into ChatGPT, asking it to be optimized, while a third employee tasked ChatGPT with making minutes of the meeting. The company has now put some safeguards in place, such as limiting the capacity of each question to not more than 1,024 bytes. Samsung has also instructed its employees to exercise caution since data entered into ChatGPT is transmitted to external servers, and the company cannot recover outflow data.
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Germany could block ChatGPT if needed, says data protection chiefGermany could follow in Italy's footsteps by blocking ChatGPT over data security concerns, the German commissioner for data protection told the Handelsblatt newspaper in comments published on Monday.
Read more »
ChatGPT is finding itself everywhere, now in houses of worshipWhen a New York Rabbi went viral for delivering ChatGPT-generated sermon, his authenticity as a religious leader came into question.
Read more »
The ChatGPT King Isn’t Worried, but He Knows You Might BeI first met Sam Altman in the summer of 2019, days after Microsoft agreed to invest $1 billion in his 3-year-old startup, OpenAI. At his suggestion, we had dinner at a small, decidedly modern restaurant not far from his home in San Francisco. Halfway through the meal, he held up his iPhone so I could see the contract he had spent the past several months negotiating with one of the world’s largest tech companies. It said Microsoft’s billion-dollar investment would help OpenAI build what was calle
Read more »
AI chatbots like ChatGPT could soon play a significant role in medicineAdvanced LLM chatbots such as ChatGPT have been found to provide surprisingly accurate medical information.
Read more »
ChatGPT and Dall-E Should Watermark Their ResultsIn response to viral Dall-E-generated pictures of Donald Trump's arrest, a Berkeley computer science professor argues for the visual designation of AI's images.
Read more »
The AI chatbot wars: Google's Bard versus OpenAI's ChatGPTBoth are very good at processing natural language artificial intelligence, but if one is better than the other, which is it?
Read more »