Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

University Apologizes For Using AI To Write Email About Mass Shooting After Student Outrage

Vanderbilt University stadium, Nashville, Tennessee.
John Greim/LightRocket via Getty Images

Vanderbilt University is facing backlash for using ChatGPT to craft an email to students about the recent mass shooting at Michigan State University.

Vanderbilt University had to apologize after sending out an email to students in the wake of the mass shooting at Michigan State University last month because the email showed it had written using the ChatGPT chatbot.

It's not that the email was particularly inappropriate or coldhearted, but the university seemed to not realize the optics of using the chatbot to write such sensitive communication.


The message itself read like a fairly standard boilerplate response to a tragedy:

"In the wake of the Michigan shootings, let us come together as a community to reaffirm our commitment to caring for one another and promoting a culture of inclusivity on our campus."
"By doing so, we can honor the victims of this tragedy and work towards a safer, more compassionate future for all."

While this seems like a pretty standard and acceptable message to send out in the wake of a tragedy, the last line of the email really ruined the message.

"Paraphrase from OpenAI’s ChatGPT language model, personal communication, February 15, 2023."

People couldn't believe the school had used an AI chatbot to write such important communication.

A screenshot of a tweet from John Scalzi "For f**k's sake DON'T USE AI TO WRITE IMPORTANT THINGS" @scalzi/Twitter


Others just couldn't believe nobody thought to remove the line saying it was paraphrased from ChatGPT.


The university quickly responded to the criticism with an apology in which the decision to use ChatGPT for the message was called "poor judgement."

Nicole Joseph, Assistant Dean for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion at Vanderbilt, sent a followup email to explain how such an obvious mistake was made in the first place.

Laith Kayat, a Vanderbilt student in his senior year whose sister attends Michigan State, called the EDI department's use of the chatbot for such important and sensitive communication "disgusting."

Fellow student Bethany Stauffer agreed, telling Vanderbilt's student newspaper the Vanderbilt Hustler:

"There is a sick and twisted irony to making a computer write your message about community and togetherness because you can’t be bothered to reflect on it yourself."

Kayat challenged the school's administration to be better.

"Deans, provosts, and the chancellor: Do more. Do anything. And lead us into a better future with genuine, human empathy, not a robot. [Administrators] only care about perception and their institutional politics of saving face."

With ChatGPT and similar tools that use machine learning to predict text getting more complex and becoming more widespread, incidents like this are likely to become more common.

It is probably time for a conversation about when it is and isn't appropriate to use machine generated text in communications.

More from Trending

Laura Loomer; Donald Trump
John Lamparski/Getty Images; Jeff Swensen/Getty Images

Even The MAGA Faithful Are Calling Out Trump For Reportedly Accepting A Jumbo Jet From Qatar

After news outlets revealed that President Donald Trump is accepting a $400 million luxury jet from the Qatar royal family, one of his prominent supporters—far-right conspiracy theorist Laura Loomer—spoke out to criticize the move.

In a Truth Social post Sunday night, Trump claimed the Pentagon would be accepting a Boeing 747-8 “GIFT, FREE OF CHARGE” to serve as a temporary replacement for Air Force One. Trump’s comments come just ahead of his planned visit to Doha, Qatar—part of his first major overseas trip since taking office in January.

Keep Reading Show less
Ansley Baker and Liz Victor
Boston 25 News

Boston Hotel Security Guard Kicks Lesbian Couple Out Of Women's Bathroom After Accusing One Of Being A Man

A lesbian couple is calling for a boycott of a Boston hotel after a security guard misgendered one of them and kicked them out.

Ansley Baker and her girlfriend, Liz Victor were attending a Kentucky Derby party at Boston's Liberty Hotel on Saturday, May 3.

Keep Reading Show less
Joe Pesci; Donald Trump
PBS; Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

Resurfaced Clips From 'Sesame Street' Shed Light On Why Trump Hates PBS So Much

Friends, family, and professional associates of MAGA Republican President Donald Trump have all called out a serious lack of emotional maturity in the 78-year-old.

They've highlighted multiple instances of the former reality show host harming his own self interests for the sake of petty revenge against anyone or anything that bruises his fragile ego.

Keep Reading Show less
Elmo
Craig Barritt/Getty Images for Headspace

Fake LinkedIn Post From 'Elmo' About Getting Laid Off From 'Sesame Street' Goes Viral—And It's Brutal

One of the Trump Administration's most recent rounds of budget-slashing was aimed squarely at NPR and PBS, the latter of which gave us one of American culture's most iconic institutions: Sesame Street.

The show's future now of course hangs in the balance, and one of its most beloved characters, Elmo, is calling it a layoff.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from video of Ken Turner, the tank, and the Tesla
Led By Donkeys

98-Year-Old WWII Vet Uses Tank To 'Crush Fascism' By Literally Crushing A Tesla In Viral Video

98-year-old British World War II veteran Ken Turner has gone viral after using a Sherman tank to crush a Tesla vehicle in an act of protest against Elon Musk and the rise of fascism around the globe.

Turner, a former Royal Engineer, crushed a Tesla electric vehicle bearing the license plate “FASCISM” in a bold protest organized by the activist group Led by Donkeys. The car, donated by a Tesla owner who said they were “appalled” by Musk’s embrace of far-right politics in Europe, was used in the dramatic stunt to symbolize resistance to rising authoritarianism.

Keep Reading Show less