OpenAI did not respect Canadian privacy laws in developing ChatGPT, probe finds
OTTAWA — OpenAI failed to respect Canadian privacy laws when training its artificial intelligence-powered ChatGPT chatbot, federal and provincial watchdogs have found.
The conclusion came Wednesday in a report on a joint investigation by federal privacy commissioner Philippe Dufresne and his counterparts from British Columbia, Alberta and Quebec.
ChatGPT, released in November 2022, is a popular conversation-style tool that responds to online users’ prompts with a wide range of information almost instantly — responses that may or may not be accurate.
The privacy watchdogs found OpenAI’s collection of information to train its models was overly broad, resulting in the compilation and use of sensitive personal details.


