Tag: chatbots
Q&A: Univ. of Phoenix CIO says chatbots could threaten innovation
The emergence of artificial intelligence (AI) has opened the door to endless opportunities across hundreds of industries, but privacy continues to be huge concern. The use of data to inform AI tools can unintentionally reveal sensitive and personal information.
Chatbots built atop large language models (LLMs) such as GPT-4 hold tremendous promise to reduce the amount of time knowedge workers spend summarizing meeting transcripts and online chats, creating presenations and campaigns, performing data analysis and even compiling code. But the technology is far from fully vetted.
As AI tools continue to grow and gain acceptance — not just within consumer-facing applications such as Microsoft’s Bing and Google’s Bard chatbot-powered search engines — there’s a growing concern over data privacy and originality.
Fed up with the Bing AI chatbot’s attitude? Now you can change its personality
I tried using Bing’s AI chatbot’s tones. Here’s what happened.
Bing, Bard, and ChatGPT: AI chatbots are rewriting the internet
How we use the internet is changing fast, thanks to the advancement of AI-powered chatbots that can find information and redeliver it as a simple conversation.
People on mental health waiting lists cautioned not to turn to chatbots
ChatGPT productivity hacks: Five ways to use chatbots to make your life easier
News Publishers Are Wary of the Microsoft Bing Chatbot’s Media Diet
Reddit thinks AI chatbots will ‘complement’ human connection, not replace it
Reddit doesn’t seem to be too worried about the AI-powered conversational chatbots like the ones Google and Microsoft revealed this week, based on a statement the company shared with The Verge. Shifting from traditional search to ChatGPT-like bots could erase the strategy of appending “reddit” to your searches to find human-sourced information instead of SEO-optimized garbage.
But Reddit believes the chatbots won’t replace actual human connection.
“AI chatbot technologies are still new and something we’re exploring and keeping our eyes on,” said Reddit spokesperson Nick Singer. “Though, there will always be a need for genuine community and human connection, which can be aided by tools like this. We see chatbots being used in fun and…