ChatGPT et confidentialité : pourquoi vos conversations n’ont pas les mêmes protections légales qu’une thérapie ou un conseil juridique

Les discussions avec ChatGPT passent-elles à travers les mailles du filet juridique ? Contrairement aux séances de thérapie ou aux consultations juridiques, vos échanges avec l'IA ne bénéficient d'aucun cadre de protection stricte.
Un vide juridique à 360°
Pas de secret professionnel, pas de RGPD renforcé - juste des serveurs qui ingurgitent vos données comme un hedge fund avale des ETF crypto. Les conditions d'utilisation remplacent le code de déontologie.
La confidentialité version 2.0
Les géants de la tech jouent aux apprentis sorciers avec nos données sensibles, tout en vous faisant croire à une sécurité absolue. Un pari risqué, surtout quand on sait que même les blockchains 'privées' ont leurs failles.
Conclusion : Dans un monde où même l'or numérique peut s'évaporer, faut-il vraiment faire confiance à un chatbot pour vos secrets les plus intimes ?
Lack of privacy may be a barrier for ChatGPT’s widespread usage
OpenAI sees this lack of privacy as a potential barrier to wider use. Beyond the huge volumes of online data needed to train its models, the company now faces demands to hand over user chats in litigation.
In one high‐profile case, OpenAI is battling a major court order as part of its The New York Times lawsuit. The ruling would force the company to retain the records of several hundred million ChatGPT users worldwide, excluding only those on the enterprise version.
OpenAI has appealed the decision, labeling it “an overreach,” and arguing that if courts can override its own privacy policies, future demands for law enforcement or discovery access could multiply.
Today’s tech firms regularly get subpoenas for user data in criminal investigations. But as laws evolve, so do concerns about what digital footprints might reveal. When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in June 2022, many users shifted to more secure apps or to Apple Health, which encrypts its records.
Altman also quizzed Von about his ChatGPT usage after the host admitted he was wary of sharing personal details. “I think it makes sense … to really want the privacy clarity before you use [ChatGPT] a lot — like the legal clarity,” Altman said, underscoring that until AI enjoys the same confidentiality as traditional professionals, users may think twice before opening up.
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