Google sues scammers over creation of fake Bard AI chatbot
Google LLC has filed a lawsuit against three scammers for creating fake advertisements for updates to Google’s artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot Bard, among other things, which when downloaded, installs malware.
The lawsuit was filed on Nov. 13 and names the defendants as “DOES 1-3,” as they remain anonymous. Google says that the scammers have used its trademarks specifically relating to its AI products such as “Google, Google AI, and Bard” to “lure unsuspecting victims into downloading malware onto their computers.”
It gave an example of deceptive social media pages and content with its trademarks that make it look like a Google product, with invitations to download free versions of Bard and other AI products.
Google saidthat unsuspecting users unknowingly download the malware by following the links which are designed to access and exploit users’ social media login credentials, mostly targeting businesses and advertisers.
The Tech Giant is asking the court for damages, an award of attorneys’ fees, permanent injunctive relief for injuries inflicted by the defendants, all profits that are obtained by the scammers and a comprehensive restraining order, along with anything else the court deems “just and equitable.”
Related: OpenAI promises to fund legal costs for ChatGPT users sued over copyright
The lawsuit comes as AI services, including chatbot services, have seen a major increase in users worldwide. According to recent data, Google’s Bard bot gets 49.7 million unique visitors each month.
OpenAI’s popular AI chatbot service, ChatGPT, has more than 100 million monthly users with nearly 1.5 billion monthly visitors to its website.
This upsurge in popularity and accessibility of AI services has also brought many lawsuits against the companies developing the technology. OpenAI, Google and Meta – the parent company of Facebook and Instagram- have all been caught up in legal battles over the last year.
In July, Google was brought into a class-action lawsuit in which eight individuals who filed on behalf of “millions of class members,” such as internet users and copyright holders, said that Google had violated their privacy and property rights. It came after Google updated its new privacy policy with data scraping capabilities for AI training purposes.
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