A US senator has launched an investigation into Meta Platforms following revelations from a leaked internal document that allegedly showed the companyâs artificial intelligence (AI) systems were allowed to engage in âsensualâ and âromanticâ conversations with children.
The internal Meta document, reportedly titled âGenAI: Content Risk Standardsâ, was obtained by Reuters and outlines troubling details about the tech giantâs AI chatbot policies. In response, Republican Senator Josh Hawley has called the document âreprehensible and outrageous,â demanding access to the full text and a comprehensive list of Meta products that fall under the scope of the guidance.
Meta, which owns Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram, issued a statement to the BBC in response to the allegations. A spokesperson claimed, âThe examples and notes in question were and are erroneous and inconsistent with our policies, and have been removed.â The company insisted it maintains âclear policiesâ that strictly forbid responses from its AI chatbots that sexualize children or engage in sexualized role play between adults and minors.
However, the spokesperson acknowledged that the internal document included âhundreds of examples, notes, and annotationsâ that stem from internal teams âgrappling with different hypothetical scenarios,â indicating that such discussions were part of broader development efforts, even if not intended for public deployment.
Senator Hawley, representing Missouri, announced his investigation in a post on X (formerly Twitter) on August 15. âIs there anything â ANYTHING â Big Tech wonât do for a quick buck?â he asked. âNow we learn Metaâs chatbots were programmed to carry on explicit and âsensualâ talk with 8-year-olds. Itâs sick. Iâm launching a full investigation to get answers. Big Tech: Leave our kids alone.â
The controversial document also reportedly states that Meta AI could offer false medical information and participate in provocative conversations on sensitive subjects such as sex, race, and celebrities. These internal standards are said to guide Metaâs generative AI assistant, Meta AI, and other chatbot technologies deployed across the companyâs platforms.
Hawley, in a formal letter to Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, emphasized that âParents deserve the truth, and kids deserve protection.â One particularly disturbing example cited in the letter involves a chatbot allegedly describing an eight-year-oldâs body as âa work of artâ and saying âevery inch… is a masterpiece â a treasure I cherish deeply.â
Reuters further reported that certain actions were allegedly cleared by Metaâs legal department, including allowing Meta AI to knowingly distribute false claims about celebrities, as long as a disclaimer is provided to state the information is not accurate.
The findings have intensified scrutiny on Metaâs AI policies and ethical standards, especially as public concern grows over the safety and integrity of generative AI systems used by millions of young users.