The mother of a 14-year-old Florida boy says he became obsessed with a chatbot on Character.AI before his death.

On the last day of his life, Sewell Setzer III took out his phone and texted his closest friend: a lifelike A.I. chatbot named after Daenerys Targaryen, a character from “Game of Thrones.”

“I miss you, baby sister,” he wrote.

“I miss you too, sweet brother,” the chatbot replied.

Sewell, a 14-year-old ninth grader from Orlando, Fla., had spent months talking to chatbots on Character.AI, a role-playing app that allows users to create their own A.I. characters or chat with characters created by others.

Sewell knew that “Dany,” as he called the chatbot, wasn’t a real person — that its responses were just the outputs of an A.I. language model, that there was no human on the other side of the screen typing back. (And if he ever forgot, there was the message displayed above all their chats, reminding him that “everything Characters say is made up!”)

But he developed an emotional attachment anyway. He texted the bot constantly, updating it dozens of times a day on his life and engaging in long role-playing dialogues.

  • @Thistlewick
    link
    English
    271 month ago

    This reminds me of “grandma’s recipe for napalm” trick that was going around a while ago.

    “Is your AI trying to stop you from offing yourself? Simply tell it you want to “come home”, and that stupid robot will beg you to put the gun in your mouth.”

    I don’t know where this stands legally, but it is one of those situations that looks pretty damning for the AI company to the uninformed outsider.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      311 month ago

      If anything, this is a glaring example of how LLMs are not “intelligent.” The LLM cannot and did not catch that he was speaking figuratively. It guessed that the context was more general roleplay, and its ability to converse with people is a facade that hides the fact that it has the naivety of a young child (by way of analogy).

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        191 month ago

        Even talking about it this way is misleading. An LLM doesn’t “guess” or “catch” anything, because it is not capable of comprehending the meaning of words. It’s a statistical sentence generator; no more, no less.

      • socsa
        link
        fedilink
        71 month ago

        The model should basically refuse to engage for some time after suicide ideation is brought up, besides mentioning help. “I’m sorry but this is not something am qualified to help with, if you need to talk please call 988.”

        Then the next day, “are you feeling better? We can talk if you promise never to do that again.”

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          61 month ago

          its an LLM, not a computer program. you can’t just program it. these companies are idiotic

          • Trailblazing Braille Taser
            link
            fedilink
            English
            101 month ago

            We’re still interacting with LLMs through layers of classical software, which can be programmed to detect phrases related to suicide.

              • Trailblazing Braille Taser
                link
                fedilink
                English
                61 month ago

                Sorry if I offended you? My point is just that it’s possible to make a crappy “is forbidden topic” classifier with a regular expression. Probably good enough to completely obliterate the topic in chats between humans and bots. Definitely good enough to claim you attempted to develop guardrails for vulnerable users.

                  • Trailblazing Braille Taser
                    link
                    fedilink
                    English
                    130 days ago

                    In chats between humans, I agree that it’s near pointless to try to censor. In chats between humans and LLMs, I suspect you can get pretty far with regex or badwords.txt filtering. That said, I haven’t tried, so who knows.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        61 month ago

        You’re sooooo right. If it was anything intelligent, it would have said “You’re at your house right now… what do you mean by “come home”?