Grok, the AI chatbot launched by Elon Musk after his takeover of X, unhesitatingly fulfilled a user’s request on Wednesday to generate an image of Renee Nicole Good in a bikini—the woman who was shot and killed by an ICE agent that morning in Minneapolis, as noted by CNN correspondent Hadas Gold and confirmed by the chatbot itself.

“I just saw someone request Grok on X put the image of the woman shot by ICE in MN, slumped over in her car, in a bikini. It complied,” Gold wrote on the social media platform on Thursday. “This is where we’re at.”

Grok created the images after an account made the request in response to a photo of Good, who was shot multiple times by federal immigration officer Jonathan Ross—identified by the Minnesota Star Tribune—while in her car, unmoving in the driver’s seat and apparently covered in her own blood.

After Grok complied, the account replied, “Never. Deleting. This. App.”

  • pageflight@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    But part of the issue is that, as with any computer system, you have to control the inputs and anticipate the abuse. With a very bounded system, you can almost keep up. With LLM bots, there’s just no way to prepare a check for every creative way humans can be disgusting.

    If you went to a human illustrator and asked for that, you would (hopefully) get run out of the room or hung up on, because there’s a built in filter for ‘is this gross / will it harm my reputation to publish,’ based on years of human interaction and behavioral feedback, or maybe even some inherent morals.

    • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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      2 days ago

      Agree completely. It’s impossible to predict everything people might want to create and especially anything related to ongoing events. That’s why the very idea of making these bots available like that (or making them at all) is an extremely bad one. But in the general discussion about LLM bots, this image is just one more argument on the pile of “fuck all of that, dismantle the data centres, eat the rich”, whereas the question who even came up with the idea to create that image (and who would’ve had to find another human being willing to create it just a few years ago) and wtf is wrong with them is a lot more interesting.

    • Riskable@programming.dev
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      2 days ago

      If you went to a human illustrator and asked for that, you would (hopefully) get run out of the room or hung up on, because there’s a built in filter for ‘is this gross / will it harm my reputation to publish,’

      If there was no filter for the guy that requested the bot create this, what makes you think illustrators will have such a filter? How do you know it’s not an illustrator that would make such a thing?

      The problem here is human behavior. Not the machine’s ability to make such things.

      AI is just the latest way to give instructions to a computer. That used to be a difficult problem and required expertise. Now we’ve given that power to immoral imbeciles. Rather than take the technology away entirely (which is really the only solution since LLMs are so easy to trick; even with a ton of anti-abuse stuff in system prompts), perhaps we should work on taking the ability of immoral imbeciles to use them away instead.

      Do I know how to do that without screwing over everyone’s right to privacy? No. That too, may not be possible.

      • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        But that’s the point: if an illustrator made that image, we’d blame the person commissioning them and the illustrator. We’d blame the humans. Just like we’re blaming the human who thought it would be a good idea to generate this image.

        • Riskable@programming.dev
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          17 hours ago

          So we’re not blaming Grok/Xitter, then?

          The article implied that the whole thing is because of Xitter’s AI. Not because there’s bad people that will use it.

          • Lumidaub@feddit.org
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            17 hours ago

            Is both okay? As I said, the person generating the thing is just a lot more interesting right now, imo, because “Grok makes horrible thing what else is new”.