I work in a 911 dispatch center, one time I had someone from the police in one town, let's call it Townsville, trying to get ahold of an officer from another town in our county, Citysburg.
I go to put a phone call request in for them, and ask what it's regarding, and they say it's about an incident that happened at the Mega Lo Mart in Citysburg.
There is no Mega Lo Mart in Citysburg, but there are a couple in nearby towns, some of them have Citysburg mailing addresses, or people might casually say that they're in Citysburg because they don't really know where the borders are, this is pretty common and we deal with it a lot, so I ask if they have the address to make sure that I'm getting them in contact with the police department that actually covers that store.
They spit out an address like 123 Main St in East Jabip
East Jabip isn't in our county, I'd never even heard of that town before. I punch it into Google maps, it's like 2 or 3 hours away from us and sure enough there is a Walmart at that address there.
So to make sure I wasn't missing something, I asked why they wanted to speak with Citysburg police if the incident happened in East Jabip.
And they reply "yeah, I'd never heard of east Jabip either, so I punched the address into Google and the AI told me that it was in Citysburg"
Just blatantly false, AI-hallucinated bullshit.
And our cops (or their office staff, can't remember who exactly it came from) just blindly believed it and didn't bother to verify it at all.
And Citysburg isn't some nowhere town, we're a fairly dense suburban county, these two towns are maybe about a 20 minute drive from each other if traffic cooperates, and Citysburg is our county seat, cops from all over the county are there all the time for court and such and the surrounding areas, they should know that area at least well enough to know that East Jabip isn't there
And they even admitted that it didn't sound right to them, but they still went ahead with it and didn't question the AI.
And luckily this wasn't for anything too urgent, it was for credit card fraud or something along those lines. But actual emergencies get called into us all kinds of bass-ackwards ways like someone in another state calls their mom who lives here who calls her local police who transfer her to us so that we can transfer her to the police where the person who's actually having an emergency is.
That kind of stuff happens pretty frequently by the way, that's not some bullshit scenario I'm making up, I get that probably on a weekly basis.
And so it burns me up thinking that if there had been an actual emergency, having to sort out this bullshit could have caused delays in getting help to someone who needed it because someone outsourced their thinking to a shitty AI

