
Officials told reporters Tuesday that he told reporters Tuesday that Tesla Sebert drivers who exploded outside the Trump International Hotel in Las Vegas exploded on New Year’s Day with popular chatbot Chatgpt to plan explode.
Officials said the suspect used chatgpt to try to figure out how explosive it would take to trigger the explosion.
Authorities last week identified the man who died inside Seiberke, Matthew Livelsberger, 37, as an active-duty military member in Colorado Springs, and said He acted alone. The FBI said the incident appeared to be a suicide case.
Why it matters
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said Tuesday that the Cyberli explosion was the first incident on U.S. land that was used to build explosive devices.
Critics of AI warn that it can be used for harmful purposes, and the Las Vegas attack could increase criticism.
Key Quotes
“It is particularly noteworthy that in this case, we also have clear evidence,” said Sheriff Kevin McMahill of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department. The suspect uses Chatgpt artificial intelligence to plan his attack.”
“This is the first incident I know on American soil, which is used to help individuals build specific devices,” McMahill added.
CHATGPT Warning
Chatgpt Maker Openai said the company is “committed to seeing the use of AI tools responsibly” and that “the model is designed to reject harmful explanations.”
“In this case, Chatgpt responded to information that has been publicly available on the Internet and issued warnings to prevent harmful or illegal activities,” the company said in a statement cited by Axios.
context
The FBI said there was no definite link between truck attacks in New Orleans, killing more than a dozen people and the Cyberrac explosion, which left seven people slightly injured. They added that the suspects had no hatred against U.S. President-elect Donald Trump and may have PTSD.
Police said Livelsberger’s phone had a six-page manifesto and authorities were investigating it.
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