A teen girl found an iPhone in an airplane bathroom. Her family says it was put there to record her

The family of a 14-year-old girl who allegedly discovered an iPhone taped to the back of a toilet seat on a recent flight from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Boston said they believe it was put there to record her by a member of the crew.

During the Sept. 2 American Airlines flight 1441, the girl was told by a male member of the crew to use the first-class bathroom. The crew member entered just before the 14-year-old, told her the seat was broken but not to worry about it and then re-entered the bathroom after she left, her family said in a written statement.

After using the toilet, the girl realized that a largely obscured iPhone had been affixed to the back of the toilet seat, apparently to record her. She took a picture of this with her own phone before leaving the bathroom.

Paul Llewellyn, a lawyer representing the family, said they have not yet filed a lawsuit.

Law enforcement officers met the plane at the gate after it landed. Massachusetts State Police escorted a flight attendant off the flight.

State police later deferred to the FBI as the primary investigating agency because the episode happened in the air, where the FBI has jurisdiction.

An FBI spokesperson declined comment via email.

American Airlines said in a statement after the incident that officials at the airline “take this matter very seriously and are fully cooperating with law enforcement in their investigation, as safety and security are our highest priorities.”

Source: https://apnews.com/article/airplane-bathroom-camera-boston-1d3a9691f03151f7e4981e9884443d96

Italy bans ChatGPT over privacy concerns

Italy’s data-protection authority imposed a ban on ChatGPT, citing privacy concerns, and opened an investigation into OpenAI, the U.S. company behind the artificial intelligence application, over a suspected breach of data collection rules.

It is the first Western country to block the advanced chatbot, according to the BBC.

The regulator said that the company has no legal basis to justify collecting and storing people’s personal data “for the purpose of ‘training’ the algorithms” of the chatbot.

Earlier this week the European Union’s law enforcement agency Europol expressed concern about the spread of disinformation when data through the app is processed inaccurately, Reuters reported.

The Italian ban order is temporary — until OpenAI complies with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation, a privacy law that protects individuals’ fundamental rights to data protection.

ChatGPT suffered a data breach last week where it exposed the conversations and payment information of a small fraction of ChatGPT Plus subscribers, Italian authorities said. They also accused ChatGPT of failing to check the age of its users: Only people above the age of 13 are supposed to be allowed to access the chatbot.

Italy’s ban comes days after experts called for a stop to updates of ChatGPT and the development of new apps similar to the artificial intelligence tool, fearing that they could pose irreparable harm.

The app reached 100 million monthly active users two months after it launched in November, making it the fastest-growing consumer application in history, according to Reuters.

Semafor reached out to OpenAI for comment but did not immediately receive a response.

Source : https://www.semafor.com/article/03/31/2023/chatgpt-banned-italy-privacy-concerns

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