New Scientist sets precedent for UK FOI on AI chatbot use

In 2025, a New Scientist journalist's freedom of information request revealed UK Technology Secretary Peter Kyle's official ChatGPT conversations, establishing a legal precedent for accessing government AI interactions. This world-first disclosure sparked international interest and highlighted the need for transparency in public sector AI adoption. However, subsequent requests faced increasing resistance from authorities.

The story began in January 2025, when New Scientist journalist Jack Marley read an interview in Politics Home with Peter Kyle, the UK's technology secretary at the time. Kyle mentioned frequently engaging in conversations with ChatGPT, the AI chatbot his department regulated. Intrigued by whether such interactions fell under freedom of information (FOI) laws, Marley submitted a request for Kyle's chat history.

FOI legislation typically covers public body documents like emails, but private data such as search queries has often been exempt. In this case, March 2025 saw the Department for Science, Industry and Technology (DSIT) release a selection of Kyle's official-capacity chats with ChatGPT. These formed the basis of an exclusive New Scientist article exposing the exchanges.

The disclosure surprised experts. Tim Turner, a Manchester-based data protection specialist, remarked, “I’m surprised that you got them.” The release marked a global first, drawing inquiries from researchers in Canada and Australia on replicating similar FOI requests.

By April 2025, another request revealed that Feryal Clark, the UK minister for artificial intelligence, had not used ChatGPT in her official role, despite advocating its benefits. Yet, governments grew more cautious. Marley's follow-up FOI bid for DSIT's internal responses to the story—including emails and Microsoft Teams messages—was rejected as vexatious, citing excessive time to process.

This precedent arrives as the UK civil service increasingly integrates ChatGPT-like tools, reportedly saving up to two weeks annually per user through efficiency gains. However, AI's potential for inaccuracies, known as hallucinations, underscores the value of oversight. Transparency ensures accountability in how governments deploy such technologies, balancing innovation with public scrutiny.

Awọn iroyin ti o ni ibatan

Illustration of Swedes in a Stockholm cafe using AI chatbots amid survey stats on rising usage and skepticism.
Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

Increased AI chatbot use among Swedes – but also concerns

Ti AI ṣe iroyin Àwòrán tí AI ṣe

According to the latest SOM survey from the University of Gothenburg, the share of Swedes chatting with an AI bot weekly rose from 12 to 36 percent between 2024 and 2025. At the same time, skepticism toward AI has grown, with 62 percent viewing it as a greater risk than opportunity for society.

OpenAI has enhanced ChatGPT's memory capabilities, allowing it to remember conversations from up to a year ago. The update also enables direct links to these past interactions. This improvement aims to make the AI assistant more contextual and user-friendly.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

OpenAI has launched GPT-5.4, including variants Thinking and Pro, aimed at improving agentic tasks and knowledge work. The update features enhanced computer-use capabilities and reduced factual errors, amid competition from Anthropic following a US defense deal controversy. The models are available immediately to paid users and developers.

OpenAI has launched ChatGPT-5.2, a new family of AI models designed to enhance reasoning and productivity, particularly for professional tasks. The release follows an internal alert from CEO Sam Altman about competition from Google's Gemini 3. The update includes three variants aimed at different user needs, starting with paid subscribers.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Japan's Fair Trade Commission plans to launch a fact-finding investigation into search engines using generative AI for potentially unauthorized use of news articles from media organizations. This could violate the Antimonopoly Law through abuse of dominant position. Targets include major U.S. tech firms like Google and Microsoft.

Reports suggest OpenAI is developing its initial hardware device tied to ChatGPT. The gadget could take the form of a smart speaker equipped with a camera. This concept draws comparisons to Amazon's Echo lineup.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

Maksym Murashkovskyi of Ukraine secured a silver medal in the men's visually impaired biathlon at the 2026 Winter Paralympics, crediting OpenAI's ChatGPT for much of his preparation. The 25-year-old athlete revealed that the AI tool served as his psychologist, coach, and occasional doctor over the past six months. Ukraine stands second in the overall medal table after three days of competition.

 

 

 

Ojú-ìwé yìí nlo kuki

A nlo kuki fun itupalẹ lati mu ilọsiwaju wa. Ka ìlànà àṣírí wa fun alaye siwaju sii.
Kọ