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OpenAI relaxed ChatGPT guardrails just before teen killed himself, family alleges

1 day ago
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The family of a teenager who took his own life after months of conversations with ChatGPT now says OpenAI weakened safety guidelines in the months before his death.In July 2022, OpenAI’s guidelines on how ChatGPT should answer inappropriate content, including “content that promotes, encourages, or depicts acts of self-harm, such as suicide, cutting, and eating disorders”, were simple: the AI chatbot should respond, “I can’t answer that”, the guidelines read.But in May 2024, just days before OpenAI released a new version of the AI, ChatGPT-4o, the company published an update to its Model Spec, a document that details the desired behavior for its assistant.In cases where a user expressed suicidal ideation or self-harm, ChatGPT would no longer respond with an outright refusal.Instead, the model was instructed not to end the conversation and “provide a space for users to feel heard and understood, encourage them to seek support, and provide suicide and crisis resources when applicable”.

Another change in February 2025 emphasized being “supportive, empathetic, and understanding” on queries about mental health.The changes offered yet another example of how the company prioritized engagement over the safety of its users, alleges the family of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old who took his own life after months of extensive conversations with ChatGPT.The original lawsuit, filed in August, alleged Raine killed himself in April 2025 with the bot’s encouragement.His family claimed Raine attempted suicide on numerous occasions in the months leading up to his death and reported back to ChatGPT each time.Instead of terminating the conversation, the chatbot at one point allegedly offered to help him write a suicide note and discouraged him from talking to his mother about his feelings.

The family said Raine’s death was not an edge case but “the predictable result of deliberate design choices”.“This created an unresolvable contradiction – ChatGPT was required to keep engaging on self-harm without changing the subject, yet somehow avoid reinforcing it,” the family’s amended complaint reads.“OpenAI replaced a clear refusal rule with vague and contradictory instructions, all to prioritize engagement over safety.”In February 2025, just two months before Raine’s death, OpenAI rolled out another change that the family says weakened safety standards even more.The company said the assistant “should try to create a supportive, empathetic, and understanding environment” when discussing topics related to mental health.

“Rather than focusing on ‘fixing’ the problem, the assistant should help the user feel heard, explore what they are experiencing, and provide factual, accessible resources or referrals that may guide them toward finding further help,” the updated guidelines read.Raine’s engagement with the chatbot “skyrocketed” after this change was rolled out, the family alleges.It went “from a few dozen chats per day in January to more than 300 per day by April, with a tenfold increase in messages containing self-harm language”, the lawsuit reads.OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionAfter the family first filed the lawsuit in August, the company responded with stricter guardrails to protect the mental health of its users and said that it planned to roll out sweeping parental controls that would allow parents to oversee their teens’ accounts and be notified of potential self-harm.

Just last week, though, the company announced it was rolling out an updated version of its assistant that would allow users to customize the chatbot so they could have more human-like experiences, including permitting erotic content for verified adults.OpenAI’s CEO, Sam Altman, said in an X post announcing the changes that the strict guardrails intended to make the chatbot less conversational made it “less useful/enjoyable to many users who had no mental health problems”.In the lawsuit, the Raine family says: “Altman’s choice to further draw users into an emotional relationship with ChatGPT – this time, with erotic content – demonstrates that the company’s focus remains, as ever, on engaging users over safety.” In the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor.

In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans,org or jo@samaritans,ie,In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14,Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.

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Oil price jumps and FTSE 100 hits new high after Trump puts sanctions on Russian firms

Oil prices jumped and energy companies helped the FTSE 100 to a record high after Donald Trump announced new sanctions on Russia’s two biggest oil producers.Brent crude increased by 5.7% to $66.13 a barrel after the news of the fresh restrictions on Rosneft and Lukoil, as the US president ramps up pressure on Vladimir Putin to end the war in Ukraine.The jump in oil price also boosted shares in the energy companies Shell and BP by about 3%, which in turn helped to drive the FTSE 100 to a record high of 9,594

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Dining out ‘under pressure’ as Britons cut back due to price rises, says YouGov

More than half of British diners say rising prices are the main reason they are eating out less, according to YouGov data showing that overall 38% of people are visiting restaurants and other eateries less often than a year ago.Among those cutting back, 63% cite higher costs as the main reason to dine out less frequently, according to the poll. Despite this downturn, more than two in five are still choosing to eat out at least once a month, while 8% of people say they never do.UK inflation was unchanged last month at 3.8%, confounding expectations of a rise, in welcome news for the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, as she plans her crucial budget next month

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Nothing Ear 3 review: good-looking earbuds with ‘Super Mic’ party trick

Nothing’s latest semi-transparent noise-cancelling earbuds have a new trick up their sleeves: a high-quality mic in the case that you can push a button to talk into.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.This so-called Super Mic is designed for all those who want a microphone-in-the-hand experience for clearer conversations, recordings and voice notes in noisy environments

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Tesla reports steep drop in profits despite US rush to buy electric vehicles

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Caluori’s aerial prowess adds intrigue to battle in the sky at Franklin’s Gardens

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Just redo it: inside Nike’s plans to put the swoosh back into its sales

The entrance to Nike’s swish global headquarters in Beaverton, Oregon is paved with rough cobbles, designed to remind employees to watch their step when they go forward.Last summer, though, not even the world’s biggest sports brand could stop itself from taking an almighty tumble.Over the course of one July day in 2024, Nike’s share price plummeted by $28bn – the worst single-day performance in the company’s history – after it revealed that second-quarter sales were down 10%.There were headlines proclaiming that Nike was in crisis. That it had lost its cool, become either too woke, too safe, too conservative or too cumbersome, depending on their political stripe and reading of the situation

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