Google AI Chatbot Bard provides erroneous information
Google's AI chatbot Bard, a competitor to OpenAI's ChatGPT, was unveiled on Monday and is slated to become "more freely available to the public in the coming weeks." However, experts have noted that Bard made a factual error in its first demo, so the bot isn't off to a fantastic start.
Google has an artificial intelligence-focused branch called Google AI.
Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google, announced Google I/O 2017.
Google launched online advertising in which its highly anticipated artificial intelligence chatbot Bard provided an incorrect response.
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The internet giant tweeted a brief GIF clip showing Bard in action and called the chatbot a "launchpad for inquiry" that would help simplify complex subjects.
What JWST discoveries can I share with my 9-year-old? Bard's commercial prompt.
Bard's responses include that the JWST took the first photographs of exoplanets. False.
NASA says the European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) took the first exoplanet photos in 2004.
Google's comment request went unanswered. Bard was announced on Monday.
"I do enjoy and appreciate that one of the most powerful corporations on the globe is utilising a JWST search to advertise their LLM," Tremblay continued in a subsequent tweet.
Awesome! But despite seeming eerily impressive, ChatGPT, etc., are frequently *very confidently* incorrect. It will be interesting to watch if LLMs eventually self-correct.
Tremblay says AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Bard tend to assert misleading information as fact. Autocomplete systems often "hallucinate" or makeup facts.
They use patterns to predict the next word in a sentence rather than accessing a database of experimentally validated facts. One famous AI professor called them "bullshit generators" since they are probabilistic.
Microsoft and Google's desire to use their products as search engines has exacerbated the internet's misinformation. There, chatbots speak like all-knowing machines.
Microsoft, which yesterday unveiled its AI-powered Bing search engine, addressed these issues by placing user accountability. "AI powers Bing; therefore, surprises and mishaps are conceivable," the company warns. Please verify and provide feedback.
"This underscores the necessity of a robust testing procedure," Google spokesperson Jane Park told The Verge. We'll use external input and internal testing to guarantee Bard's responses are high-quality, safe, and based on real-world facts.