I suspect the analog will be that the "human in the loop" will bear all the consequences. Perhaps even if they did nothing wrong and are in fact the victim in that situation.
Take the case of Linda Yaccarino. Ordinarily, if a male employee publicly and sexually harassed his female CEO on Twitter, he would (and should) be fired immediately. When Grok did that though, it's the CEO who ended up quitting.
Take the case of Linda Yaccarino. Ordinarily, if a male employee publicly and sexually harassed his female CEO on Twitter, he would (and should) be fired immediately. When Grok did that though, it's the CEO who ended up quitting.