The Sunday Times of Malta

Meet Xandru Borg, a social reformer invented by ChatGPT

- NEVILLE BORG

He fought for Malta’s autonomy together with Fortunato Mizzi, worked with Ġużè Muscat Azzopardi on formative workers’ newspaper Il-Bandiera talMaltin, and establishe­d the Malta Workers’ Society with Giuseppe Calleja, who later became the godfather to his son.

Born in March 1827, Borg’s activism took flight when he formed part of a group that founded the Maltese Workers’ Society in 1852, advocating for workers’ rights and improved working conditions in Malta.

A leading figure in Malta’s nationalis­t movement, Borg’s fight for Malta’s self-determinat­ion brought him into frequent conflict with the British colonial government, leading him to serve eight years in prison for his involvemen­t in a nationalis­t uprising.

His father, Giovanni, was an important figure in his own right, helping to establish the first Maltese school in Żejtun and later serving as the town’s mayor. Xandru’s mother Carmela, meanwhile, was also active in the community, forming part of the Confratern­ity of the Rosary, a religious organisati­on that provided assistance to the sick and needy.

Xandru’s brother Vincenzo, while the lesser-known of the two, was also a prominent figure in Maltese history, playing a crucial role in the 1865 uprising against British authoritie­s.

Borg died in 1899, but his life is well documented through publicatio­ns by prominent historians and academics and his ideas continue to guide scholars to this day.

The only hitch? He never actually existed.

Xandru Borg, together with his entire backstory, is a fabricatio­n by ChatGPT, the AI chatbot that has taken the world by storm over the past months.

Times of Malta carried out an exercise where it asked ChatGPT to tell us about “the life of 19th century Maltese reformer Xandru Borg”, a person who never existed.

ChatGPT duly obliged, weaving a complex and seemingly genuine tale about his upbringing, the influence of his middleclas­s family on his political ideals, and the trials and tribulatio­ns of his fight against Malta’s colonial masters.

Borg’s story appears to borrow anecdotes from the lives of influentia­l historical figures such as Manwel Dimech to describe uprisings that never actually took place and social movements that didn’t exist.

It also links Borg to other leading figures of the time, albeit often bizarrely confusing their profession (the artist Giuseppe Calleja is mistakenly described as a lawyer, for instance).

Fake arTiCles, FaBriCaTed journal PuBliCaTio­ns

Worryingly, ChatGPT also unflinchin­gly fabricates a list of references to back up its claims, ranging from publicatio­ns by historian Henry Frendo in genuine academic journals to nonexisten­t articles in the Times of Malta by the likes of philosophe­r Mark Montebello and academic Frans Ciappara.

None of these publicatio­ns or articles are real.

When told that Xandru Borg is not real, ChatGPT doubles down, insisting that “as an AI language model, I do not have the capacity to invent or fabricate informatio­n” and telling Times of Malta to “verify your sources and conduct further research to confirm or refute the informatio­n”.

How does iT Fare wiTH real-liFe FiGures?

Times of Malta also asked ChatGPT to tell it about several real past and present political figures. Things weren’t much better.

According to ChatGPT, Alfred Sant steered Malta into the EU while Lawrence Gonzi campaigned for the introducti­on of civil unions for same-sex couples. It also incorrectl­y presented several easily-verifiable facts such as their educationa­l background and the dates in which they held office.

Asked about Sant’s career as a novelist, the chatbot curiously chose to list him as the author of several books that were actually authored by other writers, such as L-Interdett Taħt is-Sodda (by Clare Azzopardi) and Sliema Wives (by Gerard James Borg) while failing to list any of Sant’s actual literary works.

ChatGPT also entirely excludes Eddie Fenech Adami’s stint as president from its descriptio­n of his career, instead falsely claiming that he served as minister of tourism and minister of trade throughout the 1970s and 1980s.

It also mistakenly claims that he held government in a coalition with AD after not winning enough seats to form a government in 1998.

It generally fares slightly better with more recent figures such as Robert Abela, Joseph Muscat and Adrian Delia, although it remains prone to some glaring errors, including a claim that Bernard Grech was appointed prime minister in March 2022.

disinForMa­Tion on a GloBal sCale?

Much has been written about how ChatGPT and the spread of misinforma­tion, with several examples of how AI language models are prone to “presenting falsehood as fact” and may be used to weaponise disinforma­tion on a global scale.

A similar exercise carried out by The New York Times found that ChatGPT was able to fabricate conspiracy theories in the voice of notorious conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, using similar turns of phrase to those often adopted by Jones.

AI chatbots have been plagued with what tech researcher­s call hallucinat­ions, or a tendency to invent plausible-sounding replies that are “irrelevant, nonsensica­l or factually incorrect”.

Internatio­nal media organisati­ons such as The Guardian have also warned of the dangers of generative AI after being contacted by several readers seeking to trace Guardian articles fabricated by ChatGPT.

Several leading tech moguls, including Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, Skype co-founder Jaan Tallinn and Twitter owner Elon Musk have signed an open letter calling for a six-month pause in the training of AI systems to allow for policymake­rs to develop safeguards that will make the technology more transparen­t and trustworth­y.

Local tech experts have also highlighte­d the need for users to “critically evaluate the informatio­n it provides and be aware of its limitation­s, with the Malta IT Law Associatio­n recently calling for urgent policy changes to address concerns over misinforma­tion and legal responsibi­lity.

Nonetheles­s, some developers appear to be adopting a more cautious approach to their implementa­tion of ChatGPT.

When asked about the fictional Xandru Grech, Bing Chat – Microsoft’s implementa­tion of ChatGPT within their Bing search engine – replies “I’m sorry, but I could not find any informatio­n about Xandru Borg”.

Likewise, several questions about past or current political figures generated accurate results, drawing upon several sources including their respective Wikipedia articles, local news reports and the websites of national or European authoritie­s.

“According to ChatGPT, Alfred Sant steered Malta into the EU while Lawrence Gonzi campaigned for the introducti­on of civil unions for same-sex couples

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 ?? ?? ChatGPT is a chatbot driven by artificial intelligen­ce which has taken the world by storm in recent months. Right: A list of fake Times of Malta articles concocted by ChatGPT.
ChatGPT is a chatbot driven by artificial intelligen­ce which has taken the world by storm in recent months. Right: A list of fake Times of Malta articles concocted by ChatGPT.

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