OpenAI’s ChatGPT Bot Probed by FTC Over Consumer Harms

The US Federal Trade Commission has opened an investigation into OpenAI Inc., questioning whether its popular ChatGPT conversational AI bot puts consumers’ reputations and data at risk, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The probe into the Microsoft Corp.-backed startup marks the first official inquiry into a technology that has the potential to change almost every aspect of people’s lives and has become almost equally fascinating for its potential to run awry. FTC Chair Lina Khan, who testified before Congress Thursday, has raised concerns about AI before, saying enforcers “need to be vigilant early” with transformative tools like artificial intelligence.

Microsoft declined to comment. In a series of tweets Thursday, OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman said “Of course, we will work with the FTC,” and that it is “super important” to the company that its technology is “safe and pro-consumer.” Altman also said OpenAI is “confident” it’s adhering to US laws.

“We protect user privacy and design our systems to learn about the world, not private individuals,” he said.

The Washington Post earlier reported on the FTC’s probe.

FTC Chair Lina Khan Testifies Before House Judiciary Committee
Lina Khan, chair of the Federal Trade Commission, speaks during a House Judiciary Committee hearing in Washington on July 13. Khan was grilled by House Republicans who’ve been sharply critical of her approach to antitrust and are sure to raise what they say are management missteps and ethical issues.

The FTC’s investigation opens a potent regulatory salvo at San Francisco-based OpenAI, the leader in generative AI technology whose ChatGPT app has sparked a race among companies across nearly every industry to develop their own competing chatbots. ChatGPT is built atop a large language model, which is trained on enormous swaths of text from the internet so that it can generate responses to questions in a way that sounds human-like.