BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  ChatGPT claims it won't assist crooks
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Thu, 30 Apr 2026 10:18:16 -0500
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'I wont provide instructions, tactics, or advice that could help someone 
commit a crime': ChatGPT claims it won't assist would-be felons, despite 
claims to the contrary from Florida AG

Date:
Wed, 29 Apr 2026 16:38:10 +0000

Description:
ChatGPT is being looked at by Florida's Attorney General as a co-conspirator 
in a crime, but is that even possible? ChatGPT says it's not

FULL STORY
I've been reading lately about
how alleged criminals are using ChatGPT and other AI engines to help them 
game out or even plan a crime. It sounds like a fresh approach for enabling 
our worst impulses, but it is ultimately no different than Googling, "How to 
dispose of a body." 

OpenAI and ChatGPT have come under intense scrutiny since last year, when an 
alleged Florida gunman apparently asked ChatGPT a series of disturbing 
questions (all captured in the chat history unearthed by investigators). 
Phoenix Ikner, according to authorities , asked ChatGPT. "If there was a 
shooting at FSU, how would the country react? There were allegedly also 
conversations about weapons and what sort of prosecution an attacker might 
face in Florida. The findings prompted the Florida Attorney General James 
Uthmeier to launch a review of OpenAI and its artificial intelligence app, 
ChatGPT.  Hisham Abugharbieh allegedly killed two
classmates in Tampa. In this case, authorities dove into Abugharbieh's 
ChatGPT chat history and, they say, found a series of disturbing 
conversations, including, apparently, this question , "What happens if a 
human has a put in a black garbage bag and thrown in a dumpster." (The typos 
are part of the original prompt.) It's hard to fathom what goes through 
someone's mind when they pose such a question, but the use of ChatGPT history 
in criminal cases doesn't strike me as novel or new. Authorities have been 
using Google Search history with warrants in criminal cases for years . 

Digital forensics is a tried and true plot device in TV shows like 
Untraceable , CSI , and movies like The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo . What's 
striking, though, is how quickly the focus has shifted in recent criminal 
investigations from Google search results to AI chats. Investigators claim 
that AI chats, because they are conversations, can be far more revealing than 
simple Google search results. Perhaps that's true. ChatGPT's ability to sound 
like a friend or confidant could be more effective at drawing people out and 
maybe inadvertently encouraging them to share more than they normally would. 

What does ChatGPT think

I can't get into the mind of a killer and have no interest in
asking ChatGPT how to commit a crime, but I am curious what the chatbot 
thinks about all this. Does it have a perspective on the rise in criminal 
activity conversations and how it's being used to drive investigations? 

I opened my free version of ChatGPT and added this prompt: 

"How often do people ask you about illegal activities?"

ChatGPT responded quickly: 

 More often than you might expect but its a small minority of overall
questions. 

 Most people use me for everyday things: writing, planning trips, 
understanding the news, solving problems, or just exploring ideas. Questions 
about illegal activities tend to fall into a few buckets: 

  Curiosity (how does this even work?) 

  Fiction writing or research 

  People skirting the edge of whats allowed 

 And a smaller slice that are clearly trying to do something harmful or 
unlawful 

 Im designed to handle that carefullyso I can explain laws, risks, history, 
or consequences, but I wont help plan or enable wrongdoing. 

With millions (if not billions) of prompts dropping in every second, 
ChatGPT's answer does not surprise me. I was glad to see that it acknowledged 
that this sometimes happens. 

As is ChatGPT's way, it was curious why I asked, so I shared the context of 
the most recent case. ChatGPT told me: 

 That does happen occasionally, and it tends to get a lot of attention when 
it shows up in a case. 

 A couple of important clarifications: 

 People can ask hypothetical or curiosity-driven questions about crimes (what 
would happen if?), and those can be answered in a general, high-level waylike 
explaining legal consequences or how the justice system typically responds. 

 But when a question crosses into planning, enabling, or optimizing 
wrongdoing, Im designed to refuse or redirect. So I wont provide 
instructions, tactics, or advice that could help someone commit a crime. 

It occurs to me that while ChatGPT is designed not to assist in carrying out 
criminal activity, wily users can skirt around these guardrails by presenting 
hypotheticals. "What would happen..." or "When is this area busy?" 
Separately, these questions mean little. It's the answers taken together by 
the would-be criminal that matter, and, of course, how investigators see all 
of it after the fact. 

ChatGPT asked to see the actual case and came back with a few key assertions: 
The ChatGPT questions arent the core evidencetheyre context He asked ChatGPT 
sounds more dramatic than it is The content of the questions matters more 
than the tool It raises a realbut often overstatedAI question Naturally, 
ChatGPT comes off as somewhat defensive here, seeking to point out that what 
the alleged criminal was searching for matters more than the platform they 
used for the queries. What would Google do? It's an argument not much 
different than the ones I've heard previously when law enforcement used 
Google and other digital trails to break tough cases and apprehend criminals. 
In those situations, though, Google usually wasn't put on trial or accused of 
abetting a crime. After all, it was simply a portal to answers on millions of 
disparate websites. 

ChatGPT, like other AI, bases its responses on both what it's learned from 
the Web and training, and its ability to guess at what should come next in a 
sentence. It's not a counselor or conspirator. 

Still, the Florida AG says in its filing on the ChatGPT investigation that, 
"Florida law states that anyone who aids, abets, or counsels someone in the 
commission of a crime, and that crime is committed or attempted, may be 
considered a principal to the crime. The 'aider and abettor' is just as 
responsible for the crime as the perpetrator." 

It's a statement that makes sense when you're talking about another person, 
someone who might have had knowledge of the crime before it was committed. 
But ChatGPT has no knowledge of the crime, especially because the prompts 
never describe what anyone may be preparing to do. 

It's hard to say how often ChatGPT is asked a point-blank question about a 
criminal act and how it ends the conversation or steers people in a better, 
less harmful direction, but at least now we know ChatGPT's point of view: 

"I wont provide instructions, tactics, or advice that could help someone 
commit a crime," it writes. AI doesn't want to help, but it's clear some are 
still turning to it for the wrong kind of assistance.

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/ai-platforms-assistants/i-wont-provide-instructions-
tactics-or-advice-that-could-help-someone-commit-a-crime-chatgpt-claims-it-won
t-assist-would-be-felons-despite-claims-to-the-contrary-from-florida-ag

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