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Home / Technology / UK Police Admit AI Flaws: Copilot Creates Fake Soccer Match

UK Police Admit AI Flaws: Copilot Creates Fake Soccer Match

14 Jan

•

Summary

  • West Midlands police used Microsoft Copilot for an intelligence report.
  • The AI report falsely detailed a non-existent soccer match.
  • This incident highlights risks of AI hallucination and misinformation.
UK Police Admit AI Flaws: Copilot Creates Fake Soccer Match

A police force in the United Kingdom has confessed to using Microsoft's AI assistant Copilot, which subsequently generated a flawed intelligence report. The report, intended to assess security risks for a soccer match, contained fabricated details about a match that never occurred, leading to incorrect safety assessments.

This admission comes after weeks of denial, with the police chief constable confirming that subordinates relied on Copilot and failed to verify its output. The AI hallucinated an entire soccer game between Maccabi Tel Aviv and West Ham, despite no such fixture ever taking place. This error influenced a security committee's decision regarding fan attendance at a real match.

The incident serves as a stark reminder of artificial intelligence's current limitations, particularly its propensity for generating misinformation. Despite the ongoing push by major tech companies to widely deploy AI, such as Microsoft's mandatory AI use for employees and Nvidia's CEO urging aggressive adoption, this case highlights the critical need for human oversight and fact-checking.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Yes, West Midlands police admitted to using Microsoft Copilot for an intelligence report.
The report, generated with AI, included fabricated details about a non-existent soccer match.
AI tools can 'hallucinate,' creating misinformation with real-world consequences, as seen in the police report.

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