The Tumbler Ridge, B.C., mass shooting has prompted a closer look into how artificial intelligence platforms deal with potential signs of violence, and what Ottawa is doing to ensure such cases are escalated to police.
OpenAI said in a Feb. 21 statement that since the company couldn’t identify credible or imminent planning of real-world violence, the account did not meet the threshold required to inform law enforcement about the “concerning” activity.
OpenAI’s statement came after a Wall Street Journal report said Van Rootselaar made posts with ChatGPT describing scenarios of gun violence. The report also said the company’s employees had considered alerting authorities at the time.
The RCMP has said OpenAI contacted police after the shooting. For its part, OpenAI said that once it became aware of Van Rootselaar’s name through media reports, it contacted the RCMP.
Ottawa’s Response
The case prompted Artificial Intelligence Minister Evan Solomon to summon OpenAI’s senior safety executives to a Feb. 24 meeting in Ottawa. The meeting, which also included Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree and Culture Minister Marc Miller, focused on having the company explain its safety protocols and the thresholds it uses to escalate concerning content to law enforcement.“We made it clear that Canadians expect credible warning signs of serious violence to be escalated in a timely and responsible way,” Solomon said in the statement. “Internal review alone is not sufficient when public safety is at stake.”
The meeting also consisted of discussion on how “imminent and credible risk” is identified, how cases move from automated detection to human review, and how referrals are handed, particularly when young people may be involved, he said.
Solomon said the details of the shooting were not discussed at the meeting as the police investigation is still underway. He noted the company said it would return “shortly” with more “concrete proposals tailored to the Canadian context,” and confirmed that it is cooperating with the RCMP in its investigation.
Ottawa has not yet confirmed whether it intends to regulate AI chatbots directly, but Solomon has said “all options are on the table.”
“We are reviewing broader measures to ensure that AI systems and platforms operating in Canada have clear standards and accountability and will have more to say on this work in the coming weeks,” he said in the statement.
Miller, whose department is currently working on legislation to address online harms, told reporters he thinks there is a need to have legislation to ensure AI platforms are being “responsible,” but noted that “what that looks like is still to be determined.”







