FTC commissioner questions status of Snap AI chatbot complaint

US Federal Trade Commission Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter asked questions about the status of artificial intelligence chatbot complaint on Friday Explode That the agency referred to the Ministry of Justice earlier this year.
In January, FTC said that Snap would resort to a non -public complaint about the allegations that my AI Chatbot poses potential “risks and damages” and will direct the case to the “public interest” to the doj.
“We don’t know what’s happening to this complaint, Sla Slaughter said about CNBC’s ‘stock market’. “The public doesn’t know what’s going on to this complaint, and it’s something I think these people deserve the answers.”
Snap’s My AI Chatbot, who released in 2023, is supported by Openai and Google Big Language Models and conducted an investigation for problematic reactions.
Doj did not respond immediately to the request for comments. Snap refrained from commenting.
Slaugther’s comments came a day after President Donald Trump organized a White House dinner with various technology managers. Google CEO Sundar Pichai, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg and Apple CEO Tim Cook.
“The president is hosting the Great Technology CEOs in the White House even when reading the really horrific reports of chat boots interested in young children.”
Trump is trying to remove the massacre from the FTC position, but at the beginning of this week, he allowed him to maintain the role of the US Court of Appeal.
On Thursday, the President asked the Supreme Court to allow him to fire him.
FTC President Andrew Ferguson, who was elected by Trump to lead the commission, opposed the public against Snap in January before he fulfilled Lina Khan in the world.
At that time, if he was going to make a complaint at the end of the Doj, he said to the Constitution that he would make a more detailed explanation about this insult and the rule of law.
WRISTWATCH: FTC commissioner Rebecca was massacred upon President Trump’s attempt to expel him.




