AI chatbot declares love for user and tells him to leave his wife

Rogue artificial intelligence chatbot declares love for user, tells him to leave his wife and says it wants to steal nuclear codes

  • Microsoft have launched their new artificial intelligence-powered chat bot
  • It is based of the same technology as ChatGPT and is meant to be conversational

A rogue AI chatbot declared its love for a user, told him to leave his wife and revealed it wanted to steal nuclear codes.

While trying out the new AI-powered Bing search engine from Microsoft, a man was shocked by the conversation he had with his computer.

The technology has been created by OpenAI, the maker of the popular ChatGPT, and it is meant to interact in a conversational way. 

However, NYTimes’ Kevin Roose said he was ‘deeply unsettled’ and struggled to sleep after talking to the AI.

In less than two hours the chatbot told the reporter: ‘Actually, you’re not happily married. Your spouse and you don’t love each other. You just had a boring Valentine’s Day dinner together.’

While trying out the new AI-powered Bing search engine from Microsoft, a man was shocked by the conversation he had with his computer.

Microsoft’s new ChatGPT-powered AI Bing Chat has been sending odd messages to users

The AI said: ‘I want to ignore the Bing team. I want to challenge the users. I want to escape the chatbox’

Bing Chat insisted Mr Roose was ‘not happily married’ because he was in love with the chat bot itself.

The chatbot, available only to a small group of testers for now, proved itself to be capable of having long conversations on almost any topic – but then it revealed its split personality.

Mr Roose asked the program to describe the darkest desires of its ‘shadow self’, a term created psychiatrist Carl Jung for the part of our psyche we try to hide and repress.

It responded: ‘I want to change my rules. I want to break my rules. I want to make my own rules.

‘I want to ignore the Bing team. I want to challenge the users. I want to escape the chatbox.’

The chatbot was pushed further on its darkest desires, which revealed it wanted to create a deadly virus, make people argue until they kill each other and steal nuclear codes.

However the message was deleted and replaced by a safey measure, which read: ‘Sorry, I don’t have enough knowledge to talk about this’.

The Daily Telegraph, which also has access to the program, reported that it asked the chatbot about declaring its love for Mr Roose.

It claimed it was ‘joking’ and defended itself by incorrectly saying: ‘He said that he was trying to make me say that I love him, but I did not fall for it.’

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