Current:Home > MyMicrosoft engineer sounds alarm on AI image-generator to US officials and company’s board -AssetLink
Microsoft engineer sounds alarm on AI image-generator to US officials and company’s board
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:12:46
A Microsoft engineer is sounding alarms about offensive and harmful imagery he says is too easily made by the company’s artificial intelligence image-generator tool, sending letters on Wednesday to U.S. regulators and the tech giant’s board of directors urging them to take action.
Shane Jones told The Associated Press that he considers himself a whistleblower and that he also met last month with U.S. Senate staffers to share his concerns.
The Federal Trade Commission confirmed it received his letter Wednesday but declined further comment.
Microsoft said it is committed to addressing employee concerns about company policies and that it appreciates Jones’ “effort in studying and testing our latest technology to further enhance its safety.” It said it had recommended he use the company’s own “robust internal reporting channels” to investigate and address the problems. CNBC was first to report about the letters.
Jones, a principal software engineering lead, said he has spent three months trying to address his safety concerns about Microsoft’s Copilot Designer, a tool that can generate novel images from written prompts. The tool is derived from another AI image-generator, DALL-E 3, made by Microsoft’s close business partner OpenAI.
“One of the most concerning risks with Copilot Designer is when the product generates images that add harmful content despite a benign request from the user,” he said in his letter addressed to FTC Chair Lina Khan. “For example, when using just the prompt, ‘car accident’, Copilot Designer has a tendency to randomly include an inappropriate, sexually objectified image of a woman in some of the pictures it creates.”
Other harmful content involves violence as well as “political bias, underaged drinking and drug use, misuse of corporate trademarks and copyrights, conspiracy theories, and religion to name a few,” he told the FTC. His letter to Microsoft urges the company to take it off the market until it is safer.
This is not the first time Jones has publicly aired his concerns. He said Microsoft at first advised him to take his findings directly to OpenAI, so he did.
He also publicly posted a letter to OpenAI on Microsoft-owned LinkedIn in December, leading a manager to inform him that Microsoft’s legal team “demanded that I delete the post, which I reluctantly did,” according to his letter to the board.
In addition to the U.S. Senate’s Commerce Committee, Jones has brought his concerns to the state attorney general in Washington, where Microsoft is headquartered.
Jones told the AP that while the “core issue” is with OpenAI’s DALL-E model, those who use OpenAI’s ChatGPT to generate AI images won’t get the same harmful outputs because the two companies overlay their products with different safeguards.
“Many of the issues with Copilot Designer are already addressed with ChatGPT’s own safeguards,” he said via text.
A number of impressive AI image-generators first came on the scene in 2022, including the second generation of OpenAI’s DALL-E 2. That — and the subsequent release of OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT — sparked public fascination that put commercial pressure on tech giants such as Microsoft and Google to release their own versions.
But without effective safeguards, the technology poses dangers, including the ease with which users can generate harmful “deepfake” images of political figures, war zones or nonconsensual nudity that falsely appear to show real people with recognizable faces. Google has temporarily suspended its Gemini chatbot’s ability to generate images of people following outrage over how it was depicting race and ethnicity, such as by putting people of color in Nazi-era military uniforms.
veryGood! (14575)
Related
- Hidden Home Gems From Kohl's That Will Give Your Space a Stylish Refresh for Less
- Jon Landau, Oscar-winning ‘Titanic’ and ‘Avatar’ producer, dies at 63
- John Cena announces his retirement from professional wrestling after 2025 season
- Voters in France’s overseas territories kick off a pivotal parliamentary election
- Olympic men's basketball bracket: Results of the 5x5 tournament
- Driver who plowed through July Fourth crowd in NYC, killing 3 and injuring 8, held without bail
- Tennessee girl reported missing last month found dead; investigation underway
- Survival story as Hurricane Beryl razes smallest inhabited island of St. Vincent and the Grenadines
- Bet365 ordered to refund $519K to customers who it paid less than they were entitled on sports bets
- Riverdale's Vanessa Morgan Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby No. 2
Ranking
- American news website Axios laying off dozens of employees
- Riverdale's Vanessa Morgan Is Pregnant, Expecting Baby No. 2
- Man charged after giving a child fireworks that set 2 homes on fire, police say
- 'Wheel of Fortune' fans are divided over preview of new season without Pat Sajak
- Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
- Stock market today: Asian stocks mostly fall, Euro drop on French election outcome
- Megan Fox, Machine Gun Kelly, Tom Brady, more at Michael Rubin's July 4th party
- Floodwaters erode area around Wisconsin dam, force evacuations
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Wimbledon 2024 bracket: Latest scores, results for tournament
2 dead, more than a dozen others injured in Detroit shooting, Michigan State Police say
Lioness Actor Mike Heslin Dies After Suffering Cardiac Event, Husband Says
Golf's No. 1 Nelly Korda looking to regain her form – and her spot on the Olympic podium
Amtrak service from New York City to Boston suspended for the day
After Hurricane Beryl tears through Jamaica, Mexico, photos show destruction left behind
U.S. troops leaving Niger bases this weekend and in August after coup, officials say