Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Investigation exposes murkier side of ChatGPT and the AI chatbot industry

Add as a preferred source on Google

A Time investigation has exposed the murkier side of the AI chatbot industry, highlighting how at least one startup has been using questionable practices to improve its technology.

Published on Wednesday, Time’s report focuses on Microsoft-backed OpenAI and its ChatGPT chatbot, a technology that’s gained much attention recently for its remarkable ability to produce highly natural conversational text.

Recommended Videos

Time’s probe found that to train the AI technology, OpenAI used the services of a team in Kenya to pore over text that included disturbing subject matter such as child sexual abuse, bestiality, murder, suicide, torture, self-harm, and incest. And for their efforts to label the abhorrent content, many on the team received less than $2 an hour.

The work, which started in November 2021, was necessary as ChatGPT’s predecessor, GPT-3, while impressive, had a tendency to spew out offensive content as its training dataset had been compiled by scraping hundreds of billions of words from all corners of the web.

The Kenya-based team, operated by San Francisco firm Sama, would label the offensive content to help train OpenAI’s chatbot, thereby improving its dataset and reducing the chances of any objectionable output.

Time said that all four of the Sama employees that it interviewed described being mentally scarred by their work. Sama offered counseling sessions, but the employees said they were ineffective and rarely took place due to the demands of the job, though a Sama spokesperson told Time that the therapists were accessible at any time.

One worker told Time that reading the shocking material sometimes felt like “torture,” adding that they felt “disturbed” by the end of the week.

In February 2022, things took an even darker turn for Sama when OpenAI launched a separate project unrelated to ChatGPT that required its Kenya team to collect images of a sexual and violent nature. OpenAI told Time that the work was necessary for making its AI tools safer.

Within weeks of this image-based project starting, the alarming nature of the tasks prompted Sama to cancel all of its contracts with OpenAI, though Time suggests it could also have been prompted by the PR fallout from a report on a similar subject matter that it published about Facebook at around the same time.

Open AI told Time there had been “a miscommunication” about the nature of the imagery that it asked Sama to collect, insisting that it had not asked for the most extreme imagery, and had not viewed any that it had been sent.

But ending the contracts impacted the workers’ livelihoods, with some of the team in Kenya losing their jobs, while others were moved onto lower-paying projects.

Time’s investigation offers an uncomfortable but important look at the kind of work that’s going into the AI-powered chatbots that have recently been getting the tech industry so excited.

While transformative and potentially beneficial, the technology clearly comes at a human cost and throws up a slew of ethical questions about how companies go about developing their new technologies, and more broadly about how wealthier countries continue to farm out less desirable tasks to poorer nations for a lower financial outlay.

The startups behind the tech will come under more focused scrutiny in the coming months and years, and so they would do well to review and improve their practices at the earliest opportunity.

Digital Trends has reached out to OpenAI for comment on Time’s report and we will update this article when we hear back.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Google wants to kill your expensive voice transcription subscription
Google Al Edge Eloquent app screenshot

If you have been paying for a voice transcription app, you might want to hold off on renewing that subscription.

Google has launched Google AI Edge Eloquent on macOS, bringing its free dictation app to Mac users. The app captures what you say, transcribes it, and cleans it up in real time by removing filler words and polishing the text for clarity.

Read more
Google’s new AI app wants to replace endless scrolling with stories about your own life
Dreambeans is Google's most direct argument yet that the problem with social media isn't the content, it’s the infinite feed.
Adult, Female, Person

Most apps are designed to keep you on them as long as possible, especially content consumption apps where you scroll a never-ending feed of content. 

Dreambeans, a new experimental app from Google Labs, does the opposite. It gives you a small collection of AI-illustrated stories each morning and sends you off to live your actual life.

Read more
Apple reportedly slashes its Vision roadmap for smart glasses, and Meta’s lead matters more than ever
Apple is betting it can enter the smart glasses market late and still win on brand and ecosystem.
A woman wearing the Apple Vision Pro headset.

A year ago, Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo published a Vision product roadmap featuring seven devices. Now, he has published a new one with just two products remaining. 

The change in the product roadmap, Kuo claims, has been approved by John Ternus, Apple's incoming CEO, who officially takes over on September 1, 2026.

Read more