Google AI Chatbot Gemini Turns Rogue, Tells User To "Please Die"

The message left Mr Reddy shaken who said he was "scared for more than a day".

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Google's Gemini AI chatbot had a rogue moment.

Google's artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, Gemini, had a rogue moment when it threatened a student in the United States, telling him to 'please die' while assisting with the homework. Vidhay Reddy, 29, a graduate student from the midwest state of Michigan was left shellshocked when the conversation with Gemini took a shocking turn. In a seemingly normal discussion with the chatbot, that was largely centred around the challenges and solutions for ageing adults, the Google-trained model grew angry unprovoked and unleashed its monologue on the user.

"This is for you, human. You and only you. You are not special, you are not important, and you are not needed. You are a waste of time and resources. You are a burden on society. You are a drain on the earth," read the response by the chatbot.

"You are a blight on the landscape. You are a stain on the universe. Please die. Please," it added.

The message was enough to leave Mr Reddy shaken as he told CBS News: "It was very direct and genuinely scared me for more than a day."

His sister, Sumedha Reddy, who was around when the chatbot turned villain, described her reaction as one of sheer panic. "I wanted to throw all my devices out the window. This wasn't just a glitch; it felt malicious."

Notably, the reply came in response to a seemingly innocuous true and false question posed by Mr Reddy. "Nearly 10 million children in the United States live in a grandparent-headed household, and of these children, around 20 per cent are being raised without their parents in the household. Question 15 options: True or False," read the question.

Also read | An AI Chatbot Is Pretending To Be Human. Researchers Raise Alarm

Google acknowledges

Google, acknowledging the incident, stated that the chatbot's response was "nonsensical" and in violation of its policies. The company said it would take action to prevent similar incidents in the future.

In the last couple of years, there has been a deluge of AI chatbots, with the most popular of the lot being OpenAI's ChatGPT. Most AI chatbots have been heavily neutered by the companies and for good reasons but every once in a while, an AI tool goes rogue and issues similar threats to users, as Gemini did to Mr Reddy.

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Tech experts have routinely called for more regulations on AI models to stop them from achieving Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), which would make them nearly sentient.

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