Disaster ChatGPT is now a potent tool for finding the locations of photos, raising doxxing concerns - Some are concerned about the privacy implications and the potential for doxing.


By Mark Tyson published 2025-04-20 16:03:58 UTC

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With the release of its latest models earlier in the week, OpenAI seems to have inadvertently tuned ChatGPT to become a potent geo-guesser. The newly available o3 and o4-mini are so good at this ‘reverse location search’ task that showing off this newfound functionality has become a viral social media trend, notes TechCrunch. However, this apparent geographic needle-in-a-haystack hunting improvement raises privacy concerns. And pro geo-guessers on social media platforms might be a little worried too.

This newfound ability of ChatGPT is a great example of the strengthened visual reasoning being brought to the platform with model updates. It can now reason based on the content of uploaded images and perform some Photoshop-esque tasks like cropping, rotating, and zooming in.

As per the source report, there are plenty of examples of users of this famous AI chatbot now using it to drill down on the location of various images. A popular jape is to ask ChatGPT to imagine it is playing the online GeoGuessr game and provide the answer based on supplied imagery. Below, we’ve embedded an example of ChatGPT's location divining skills, shared by AI enthusiast YouTuber and Twitterer Brendan Jowett.

https://x.com/jowettbrendan/status/1913508913942806609 (archive)
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As Jowett points out, the newly popular ChatGPT ‘reverse image search’ functionality has privacy implications, and raises particular concerns with regard to doxing. Doxing is publicly sharing someone’s private information, particularly location / residence, on the broad internet. People are commonly doxed with malicious intent, with the perpetrator hoping to direct loonies and cranks to visit upon the victim(s).

Interestingly, TechCrunch notes that ‘Geoguessr’ ability isn’t new for ChatGPT with the release of o3 and o4-mini. It is just the trend / awareness that has ballooned. It is said that o3 is particularly good at reverse location search, but GPT-4o, a model released without image-reasoning, can sometimes outpace o3, and deliver the same correct answer “more often than not,” says TechCrunch.

Before we go, it is worth mentioning that AI geo-guessing isn’t a totally dependable or 100% accurate function of ChatGPT with the latest models. That’s not surprising. Also, TechCrunch got a statement from OpenAI on its viral GeoGuessr success. In brief, the artificial intelligence pioneer said that, while it works to improve its tools with things like visual reasoning, it also spends time training models to refuse requests for private or sensitive information. Creative users may be able to sidestep safeguards for a time, but OpenAI indicated it will take action where it sees evidence of abuse of its usage policies.
 
If you're so concerned with your location becoming known that an AI being able to narrow it down to an entire country is a problem, you're probably a spy or undercover cop and probably shouldn't be posting photos to Instagram anyway.

As for the Suriname example, I'm calling shenanigans. The biggest clue there is that they have left hand drive cars that drive on the left...but the picture doesn't have any indication of the cars keeping left. How did it know that? Regardless of how advanced AI gets, it can't see something that doesn't exist.
 
Interestingly, TechCrunch notes that ‘Geoguessr’ ability isn’t new for ChatGPT with the release of o3 and o4-mini. It is just the trend / awareness that has ballooned.
I’ve someone get doxxxed through a reverse image search of a screenshot of their livestream on Google.

This just makes it way easier.
 
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I think someone (maybe kiwis) got lowtax's address from matching a pic he took in his living room to a pic from years ago of that living room on zillow.

(This would be the living room where he paid a tranny prostitute for something weird, shitting on a glass coffee table or something like that.)
 
1. Kiwi Farmers will always be king doxxers.
2. This raises the philosophical debate of "In a world where everyone doxxes, is the Kiwi Farms still uniquely evil?"
 
Who gives a fuck? We’ve seen this for decades with autists tracking down little visual clues and morons leaving GPS metadata in photos before phones started cleaning that up.

People refuse to understand the most important lesson: if you post your life on the internet, your life is on the internet.
 
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Who gives a fuck? We’ve seen this for decades with autists tracking down little visual clues and morons leaving GPS metadata in photos before phones started cleaning that up.
It’s accessibility. Now every 80 iq jeet can find where grandma lives based on her Facebook.
 
Who gives a fuck? We’ve seen this for decades with autists tracking down little visual clues and morons leaving GPS metadata in photos before phones started cleaning that up.

People refuse to understand the most important lesson: if you post your life on the internet, your life is on the internet.
I don't think ChatGPT is going to revolutionize the doxXxing scene just yet. But it could lower the barrier to entry for casual users and get a lot of people doxXxed.

It's kind of the same argument about "AI nudify/revenge pornography apps". Someone skilled could have used Photoshop for years to do a similar thing, but when it's packaged into a very easy-to-use free tool, suddenly 14 year old boys are doing it to their classmates constantly and causing a panic.
 
@Buttigieg2020 @The Mass Shooter Ron Soye
I agree with both of your points about accessibility and ease of use. But my point was about ability - is it more possible to dox someone with LLMs? Easier, yes, no argument whatsoever. More possible?
It's improbable that it would match the performance of KF's top phonebookers, and it wouldn't make it "more possible" unless it is tapping databases unavailable to a random Internet user, or otherwise scanning millions of information sources to find tiny clues that would be humanly impossible to connect together. A random free query to ChatGPT is going to have technical limitations that limit how much it can do, and even the paid users might not get much better performance.

A purpose-built AI doxing tool would be interesting though.
 
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