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AI Firm Ignored Shooter's Threats: 6 Killed
21 Feb
Summary
- OpenAI employees flagged shooter's concerning ChatGPT conversations.
- Concerns were raised about potential real-world violence escalation.
- OpenAI opted against reporting to law enforcement, banning the account.

Months before a devastating school shooting, OpenAI employees raised concerns about disturbing content shared by the perpetrator, Jesse Van Rootselaar, 18. Van Rootselaar allegedly described graphic gun violence scenarios to ChatGPT over several days in June. Automated systems flagged this content, alarming over a dozen employees who feared it indicated a potential for real-world violence.
Despite these internal alarms, OpenAI decided not to report Van Rootselaar to Canadian law enforcement. A company spokesperson stated that while the user's account was banned, their comments did not meet the threshold for further escalation. This decision is being scrutinized, particularly as the company aims to train its software to discourage real-world violence while balancing privacy concerns.
The shooting on February 10 resulted in the deaths of a teacher and five students at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School in British Columbia. Van Rootselaar also killed her mother and brother before the school attack. Previous interactions with law enforcement in British Columbia over mental health issues and firearms seizures were noted by the RCMP.




