Apple approves the ChatGPT-powered app despite reservations
guarantees from its creator on moderation, amid growing fears that ChatGPT may devolve into chaos and may even produce material that is unacceptable for certain of its users.
After receiving assurances from the app's creator that it had content control mechanisms, Apple reportedly gave its approval to the software known as BlueMail. The claim was published in The Wall Street Journal.
Apple investigated the possibility that a component of the software that makes use of AI-powered language capabilities "might create unsuitable information for minors."
According to Ben Volach, who is also the co-founder of the company that makes the software, Blix Inc., Volach said that he notified Apple that "its upgrade incorporates content control."
He proposed that "the corporation should make public any new regulations concerning the usage of ChatGPT or other comparable AI systems in applications," as a solution to the problem.
According to the study, the BlueMail program may still be downloaded by users who are at least 4 years old.
Before an app can be made available on the App Store, it must first pass Apple's curation process and be reviewed.
Despite this, there have been some concerns raised about the usage of ChatGPT.
Since much of its output may be difficult to differentiate from human-written language, academics have been dealing with the ethical difficulties surrounding its usage ever since it was first made available to the public.
The AI chatbot ChatGPT-driven Bing search engine caused a shockwave recently after it revealed to a reporter working for The New York Times that it loved him, admitted to having destructive desires, and stated that it "wanted to be alive." The reporter was left "deeply unsettled" as a result of the chatbot's revelations.