HomeEverythingEducation
Equities & FundsCrypto & Digital AssetsAI & TechnologyBusiness & CorporateUS Politics & PolicyGeopolitics & Global RiskMacro, Rates & FXCommodities & EnergyEuropean Politics & MarketsAsia-PacificReal Estate & Property
Story archiveAll categories
← All Stories

China operatives used ChatGPT to influence AI data center and tariff debates

Created at 10 Jun · 8:14 PM4 sources↑ Market-relevant2 events
IN SHORT

China-based operatives have reportedly used ChatGPT to impersonate Americans online, aiming to influence discussions on AI data centers and tariff debates. OpenAI confirmed the campaign, which sought to spread negative narratives about AI infrastructure.

✉Newsletter

PiQ Daily

Pick your topics. Get only what matters, on your cadence.

Who's Involved

China-based operatives
used ChatGPT to influence AI data center and tariff debates
OpenAI
reported on the Chinese influence campaign

↳ Why This Matters

The use of AI tools like ChatGPT by state-linked actors to manipulate public discourse highlights emerging challenges in cybersecurity and the integrity of information surrounding critical technological and economic policy debates.

Key facts

  • China-based operatives utilized ChatGPT to influence discussions on AI data centers and tariff debates.
  • The operatives aimed to shape public and policy perceptions regarding AI infrastructure and trade.
  • OpenAI confirmed a Chinese influence campaign using fabricated online personas to spread negative narratives about AI data centers.

Operatives based in China have reportedly leveraged ChatGPT to influence discussions surrounding AI data centers and tariff debates. This strategic deployment of artificial intelligence was intended to shape both public opinion and policy perspectives on key technological and economic matters. The specific aim was to mold perceptions around critical issues related to the development and regulation of AI infrastructure and international trade policies. OpenAI confirmed that China initiated an influence campaign using fabricated online personas to spread narratives about the potential harms of AI data centers.

Frequently asked questions

The report indicates that China-based operatives utilized ChatGPT.

The operatives aimed to influence discussions and shape public and policy perceptions regarding AI data centers and tariff debates.

The targeted issues included debates surrounding AI data centers and international tariff policies.

What Happens Next

01OpenAI is expected to continue monitoring and reporting on foreign influence operations.

Get the newsletter.

Pick the topics you actually care about. We'll email when there's news worth your time, on the cadence you choose. Cancel any time from your account.

Cadence

How It Developed

China-based operatives used ChatGPT to influence discussions on AI data centers and tariff debates.
OpenAI reported a Chinese influence campaign using fake personas to shape US views on AI data centers.
China-linked operatives used ChatGPT to pose as Americans online and amplify opposition to data centers.

Sources

T1
China-based operatives used ChatGPT to shape AI data centers and tariff debates https://t.co/0Fkz89pk4z@axios via PiQSuite
T1
OpenAI says China launched influence campaign to shape US attitudes on AI data centers https://t.co/owoypKAMtA@politico via PiQSuite
T1
RT @politico: OpenAI says China launched influence campaign to shape US attitudes on AI data centers https://t.co/owoypKAMtA@POLITICOEurope via PiQSuite
T1
RT @delizanickel: NEW: OpenAI says China-linked operatives used ChatGPT to pose as Americans online and amplify opposition to data centers.…@politico via PiQSuite

Related Stories

Hackers exploit AI hallucination to build botnets
8 Jul · 7:11 AM
Temasek to boost AI investments 2.5-fold over five years
8 Jul · 7:06 AM
US Communities Block $130 Billion in AI Data Centers, Pushing Bitzero's Nordic Expansion
9 Jul · 3:10 AM
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang: Engineers prefer building AI agents to coding
9 Jul · 5:35 AM
OpenAI, Meta, xAI Unveil New AI Models Amid National Security Review
8 Jul · 1:10 PM