Edward Snowden wrote on social media to his nearly 6 million followers, “Do not ever trust @OpenAI … You have been warned,” following the appointment of retired U.S. Army General Paul Nakasone to the board of the artificial intelligence technology company.

Snowden, a former National Security Agency (NSA) subcontractor, was charged with espionage by the Justice Department in 2013 after leaking thousands of top-secret records, exposing the agency’s surveillance of private citizens’ information.

In a Friday morning post on X, formerly Twitter, Snowden reshared a post providing information on OpenAI’s newest board member. Nakasone is a former NSA director, and the longest-serving leader of the U.S. Cyber Command and chief of the Central Security Service. He retired from the NSA, a position he held since 2018, in February.

Snowden wrote in an X post, “They’ve gone full mask-off: do not ever trust @OpenAI or its products (ChatGPT etc.) There is only one reason for appointing an @NSAGov Director to your board. This is a willful, calculated betrayal of the rights of every person on Earth.” He concluded the post, writing, “You have been warned.”

  • swayevenly
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    26 months ago

    the spooks are butthurt today.

    Are you from the UK?

      • swayevenly
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        6 months ago

        Was looking up if that word meant something else and the first result was a British show called Spooks. My mom used to watch it but I didn’t recognize it because it was called MI-5 in North America since spook is a racial slur. Atleast it is in the US.

        • @[email protected]
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          6 months ago

          I have never heard anyone say that as a racial slur and I grew up with a bunch of racists. Historically it was, at least in some parts of the u.s.

          I love William Gibson’s ‘Spook Country’ from 2007. I don’t remember any controversy about the title then.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spook_Country

          • sunzu
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            16 months ago

            spook as in undesirable government creep?

            because that title alone can be interpenetrated so many different ways without context

            PS i checked the wiki but now that i know the other meaning, i likely explains some of the weird takes i got in the past.

            • @[email protected]
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              26 months ago

              I always knew of spook as a racial slur, but never heard it used that way. Spook was always used as a government intelligence officer, like CIA , FBI , NSA , MI6.

          • @grue
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            -16 months ago

            I have never heard anyone say that as a racial slur and I grew up with a bunch of racists. Historically it was, at least in some parts of the u.s.

            I’ve only heard it once, in Back to the Future:

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n_Hb-PhNLT0

        • @[email protected]
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          16 months ago

          Spook is a term for intelligence agents. It is not a racial slur. Whoever you know that used it as a slur made it a slur by themselves.

          An easy way to see it’s not a racial slur in America is it’s use in culture, such as the X-Files.

        • sunzu
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          6 months ago

          Citation to the most authoritative source on the net: https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=spook.

          spooks

          1. Government intelligence agents, see G-men.

          2. Anyone involved in espionage.

          3. Careful on this phone line, there could be spooks listening in.

          4. I heard this place was crawling with spooks, some kind of weapon of mass destruction is being sold or something. by Alan May 9, 2004