"Messages are generated by Meta AI. Some may be inaccurate or inappropriate. Learn more."
Which leads to a pop-up further explaining that use cases include things like "creating something new like text or images".
I think it's going to be really interesting to see whether that's considered enough by courts, or if they'll take the position that these things pretend too well to be a real person to make such a disclaimer sufficient, similarly to how e.g. a brokerage can't disclaim "no investment advice" and then go on to say "but buy this stock, it's gonna moon tomorrow, trust me bro".
"Messages are generated by Meta AI. Some may be inaccurate or inappropriate. Learn more."
Which leads to a pop-up further explaining that use cases include things like "creating something new like text or images".
I think it's going to be really interesting to see whether that's considered enough by courts, or if they'll take the position that these things pretend too well to be a real person to make such a disclaimer sufficient, similarly to how e.g. a brokerage can't disclaim "no investment advice" and then go on to say "but buy this stock, it's gonna moon tomorrow, trust me bro".