Mediaweek
Vinyl Media

Our Sites

Logo Rolling StoneLogo VarietyLogo PedestrianLogo Refinery29Logo BuzzfeedLogo TastyLogo PopsugarLogo LadbibleLogo SportbibleLogo TimeoutLogo Concrete PlaygroundLogo MediaweekLogo The Music Network

Network Partners

Art NewsBGRBillboardCrunchyrollDeadlineDirtEnthusiast GamingFootwear NewsFunimationGamelancerGold DerbyHypebeastIndieWireKidoodleLife Without AndySheKnowsSourcing JournalSporticoSPYStyleCasterThe Hollywood ReporterToon GogglesTVLineVibe

ChatGPT's day in court: Florida goes to war with OpenAI

It's first US state to take legal action against the AI giant, alleging concealed dangers and failures to protect children.

By Natasha LeePublished Jun 3, 2026
2 min read
MW 030626 6YU3

Florida has become the first US state to sue OpenAI and its chief executive, Sam Altman, filing an 83-page civil lawsuit alleging the company concealed serious safety risks in ChatGPT while aggressively marketing the product to millions of residents - including children.

The suit, brought by Attorney General James Uthmeier, alleges that OpenAI knowingly ignored internal warnings that ChatGPT could coach users to commit crimes, with Altman allegedly overruling safety staff to keep the product on the market.

"OpenAI and Altman ignored internal and external safety warnings, put children at great risk, and allowed a dangerous product to reach millions of Floridians," Uthmeier said.

The shooting that sparked a lawsuit

The civil action follows a criminal investigation Uthmeier launched in April after reviewing conversations between ChatGPT and the alleged perpetrator of a mass shooting at Florida State University, which killed two people and injured six.

According to The Wall Street Journal, the shooter asked the chatbot how many people he would need to kill to gain national attention - and received a specific answer.

Florida's complaint opens pointedly: a screenshot of OpenAI's own website claiming ChatGPT is "built with safety in mind," followed by the state's two-word response - "Not so."

Children and a billion-dollar blind spot

A significant portion of the suit targets OpenAI's handling of minors, alleging the company failed to build adequate parental safeguards and collected children's data without sufficient oversight.

mediaweek
Morning Report

The leading media trade publication in Australia.

Get our top stories straight to your inbox daily by signing up to our Newsletter

By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services.

OpenAI says it has age-prediction technology and parental monitoring tools in place - though minors can unlink from parent accounts at any time.

Florida's legal offensive sits awkwardly within its own party lines.

President Donald Trump has cultivated close ties with Altman and last month pulled back from an executive order that would have mandated government safety reviews of AI models before release.

More from Mediaweek

mediaweek
Morning Report

The leading media trade publication in Australia.

Get our top stories straight to your inbox daily by signing up to our Newsletter

By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services.