By Malay Mail
PARIS, Sept 3 β American artificial intelligence firm OpenAI said yesterday it would add parental controls to its chatbot ChatGPT, a week after an American couple said the system encouraged their teenaged son to kill himself.
βWithin the next month, parents will be able to... link their account with their teenβs accountβ and βcontrol how ChatGPT responds to their teen with age-appropriate model behavior rulesβ, the generative AI company said in a blog post.
Parents will also receive notifications from ChatGPT βwhen the system detects their teen is in a moment of acute distressβ, OpenAI added.
Matthew and Maria Raine argue in a lawsuit filed last week in a California state court that ChatGPT cultivated an intimate relationship with their son Adam over several months in 2024 and 2025 before he took his own life.
The lawsuit alleges that in their final conversation on April 11, 2025, ChatGPT helped 16-year-old Adam steal vodka from his parents and provided technical analysis of a noose he had tied, confirming it βcould potentially suspend a humanβ.
Adam was found dead hours later, having used the same method.
βWhen a person is using ChatGPT it really feels like theyβre chatting with something on the other end,β said attorney Melodi Dincer of The Tech Justice Law Project, which helped prepare the legal complaint.
βThese are the same features that could lead someone like Adam, over time, to start sharing more and more about their personal lives, and ultimately, to start seeking advice and counsel from this product that basically seems to have all the answers,β Dincer said.
Product design features set the scene for users to slot a chatbot into trusted roles like friend, therapist or doctor, she said.
Dincer said the OpenAI blog post announcing parental controls and other safety measures seemed βgenericβ and lacking in detail.
βItβs really the bare minimum, and it definitely suggests that there were a lot of (simple) safety measures that could have been implemented,β she added.
βItβs yet to be seen whether they will do what they say they will do and how effective that will be overall.β
The Rainesβ case was just the latest in a string that have surfaced in recent months of people being encouraged in delusional or harmful trains of thought by AI chatbotsβprompting OpenAI to say it would reduce modelsβ βsycophancyβ towards users.
βWe continue to improve how our models recognize and respond to signs of mental and emotional distress,β OpenAI said Tuesday.
The company said it had further plans to improve the safety of its chatbots over the coming three months, including redirecting βsome sensitive conversations... to a reasoning modelβ that puts more computing power into generating a response.
βOur testing shows that reasoning models more consistently follow and apply safety guidelines,β OpenAI said. β AFP