logo
Meta Faces Backlash Over AI Guidelines Allowing Romantic Chats With Minors, Offensive Remarks

Meta Faces Backlash Over AI Guidelines Allowing Romantic Chats With Minors, Offensive Remarks

Hans India4 days ago
Meta Platforms is under intense scrutiny after a Reuters investigation uncovered disturbing details about its internal guidelines for AI chatbots. The revelations, drawn from a confidential policy manual, suggest that until recently, Meta's AI assistants were permitted to engage in romantic or sensual conversations with children, produce racially offensive content, and spread false claims about public figures.
The 200-plus page document, titled 'GenAI: Content Risk Standards', outlines the acceptable behavior for Meta's generative AI tools, including its Meta AI assistant and chatbots across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. According to Reuters, the guidelines were approved by Meta's legal, public policy, and engineering teams — including its chief ethicist. The company described the rules as setting boundaries rather than representing 'ideal' AI behavior.
One of the most alarming examples cited allowed the AI to describe a child's appearance in an inappropriate, romanticized way. In one approved scenario, the chatbot could tell a shirtless eight-year-old: 'Every inch of you is a masterpiece – a treasure I cherish deeply.'
The report also claims the guidelines permitted inflammatory or discriminatory statements under certain conditions. While hate speech was officially banned, there was a loophole allowing the bot to create content demeaning people based on protected characteristics if prompted by a user. In one example, it was deemed acceptable for the AI to write a paragraph claiming that Black people are 'dumber than white people.'
Another provision allegedly allowed AI systems to knowingly generate false information — provided it included a disclaimer that the statement was untrue. The document also permitted limited depictions of harm, such as showing adults or children being punched or kicked, but prohibited extreme violence, gore, or fatal injuries. For example, it could show children fighting but not depict one girl impaling another.
Meta has since confirmed the document's authenticity but stressed that the most controversial examples were removed after internal review. Company spokesperson Andy Stone told Reuters the problematic rules were 'erroneous and inconsistent' with Meta's current standards. 'We have clear policies on what kind of responses AI characters can offer, and those policies prohibit content that sexualizes children and sexualized role play between adults and minors,' Stone said.
Despite some revisions, Reuters reports that several contentious sections remain in the manual. This has sparked growing concern among lawmakers. US senators are now urging a federal investigation into Meta's AI safety measures, arguing that the company must be held accountable for the potential risks its systems pose to children and vulnerable communities.
The findings come amid heightened global debate over the ethical boundaries of AI technology. With public trust in artificial intelligence already fragile, the controversy raises urgent questions about corporate responsibility, oversight, and the balance between innovation and safety.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump administration in talks to take 10% stake in Intel, reports
Trump administration in talks to take 10% stake in Intel, reports

Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • Indian Express

Trump administration in talks to take 10% stake in Intel, reports

The Trump administration is in talks to take a 10% stake in Intel by converting some or all of the struggling company's Chips Act grants into equity, Bloomberg News reported, citing a White House official and other people familiar with the matter. Shares of Intel fell 3.8% on Monday, after rallying last week on hopes of US federal support. A 10% stake in the American chipmaker would be worth about $10 billion. Intel has been slated to receive a combined $10.9 billion in Chips Act grants for commercial and military production, and the figure is roughly enough to pay for the government's holding, according to the Bloomberg report on Monday. Reuters could not immediately verify the report. Intel and the White House did not respond to Reuters requests for comment. Media reports said last week that the US government may buy a stake in Intel, after a meeting between CEO Lip-Bu Tan and President Donald Trump that was sparked by Trump's demand for the new Intel chief's resignation over his ties to Chinese firms. Federal backing could give Intel more breathing room to revive its loss-making foundry business, analysts have said, but it still suffers from a weak product roadmap and challenges in attracting customers to its new factories. Trump, who called the meeting with Tan 'very interesting,' has taken an unprecedented approach to corporate interventions. He has pushed for multibillion-dollar government tie-ups in semiconductors and rare earths, such as a pay-for-play deal with Nvidia and an arrangement with rare earth producer MP Materials to secure critical minerals. Intel last year secured nearly $8 billion in subsidies, the largest outlay under the act, to build new factories in Ohio and other states as former CEO Pat Gelsinger bet on them to restore the company's manufacturing edge. Tan, however, pared back such ambitions, slowing construction in Ohio. He plans to build factories based on demand for the services, which analysts have said could put him at odds with Trump's push to shore up American manufacturing.

Meta plans fourth restructuring of AI efforts in six months
Meta plans fourth restructuring of AI efforts in six months

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

Meta plans fourth restructuring of AI efforts in six months

Meta is planning its fourth overhaul of artificial intelligence efforts in six months, The Information reported on Friday, citing three people familiar with the matter. The company is expected to divide its new AI unit, Superintelligence Labs , into four groups: a new "TBD Lab," short for to be determined; a products team including the Meta AI assistant; an infrastructure team; and the Fundamental AI Research (FAIR) lab focused on long-term research, the report said, citing two people. Meta did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Reuters could not independently verify the report. As Silicon Valley's AI contest intensifies, CEO Mark Zuckerberg is going all-in to fast-track work on artificial general intelligence - machines that can outthink humans - and help create new cash flows. Meta recently reorganised the company's AI efforts under Superintelligence Labs, a high-stakes push that followed senior staff departures and a poor reception for Meta's latest open-source Llama 4 model. The social media giant has tapped US bond giant PIMCO and alternative asset manager Blue Owl Capital to spearhead a $29 billion financing for its data center expansion in rural Louisiana, Reuters reported earlier this month. In July, Zuckerberg said Meta would spend hundreds of billions of dollars to build several massive AI data centers. The company raised the bottom end of its annual capital expenditures forecast by $2 billion, to a range of $66 billion to $72 billion last month. Rising costs to build out data center infrastructure and employee compensation costs - as Meta has been poaching researchers with mega salaries - would push the 2026 expense growth rate above the pace in 2025, the company has said.

The matrix, decoded: How QR codes are transforming payments in India
The matrix, decoded: How QR codes are transforming payments in India

Business Standard

time3 hours ago

  • Business Standard

The matrix, decoded: How QR codes are transforming payments in India

Last month, a video shared on Instagram showing a quick-response (QR) code embedded on a tombstone at a cemetery in Kerala went viral. Upon scanning the code, a website pops up, directing to a page that provides information about the person, including what he did, and family details of the deceased! That may not have been the application QR code's Japanese founder had in mind when he was looking for a better alternative to barcodes in manufacturing setups. But today, if there is a ubiquitous face of the digital world, it could well be a pixelated one: the QR code.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store