OpenAI logo displayed on a phone screen and ChatGPT website displayed on a laptop screen are seen in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on December 5, 2022.

To make an AI chat bot behave, Kenyan workers say they were ‘mentally scarred’ by graphic text

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ChatGPT has impressed millions with its ability to string together coherent, sometimes even accurate, sentences, blurbs, scripts, and more. To write like a human, the AI bot was trained with machine learning algorithms on a massive catalogue of material scoured from the web. But the development of ChatGPT wasn’t all automated: Human labour was required to stop ChatGPT falling into the same trap as its predecessor GPT-3, which was capable of making inappropriate, sometimes even racist (opens in new tab), comments.

According to a recent investigation by Time (opens in new tab), ChatGPT creator OpenAI outsourced this unsavory data processing task to Kenyan workers, many of whom reportedly earn less than $2 an hour.

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