In Google's statement, Bard provided misleading information.
Big Tech is trying to compete with OpenAI's ChatGPT, the amazing AI chatbot that is also the fastest-growing app ever. According to a Google blog post, Google's entry, Bard, will be launched "in the next weeks(Opens in a new tab)," but it's already nailing its impersonation of ChatGPT by creating false information.
Google's blog post introducing Bard includes an animated graphic designed to demonstrate the Bard user experience, and, to cut a long story short, the AI in it incorrectly asserts that the James Webb Space Telescope captured the first ever image of an exoplanet. Google also tweeted the animation, along with this statement.
Webb took its first image of an exoplanet in September of last year (Opens in a new tab), but it wasn't the first image of any exoplanet - that occurred in 2004. (Opens in a new tab).
It's unclear what transpired, but the timeliness of Bard's accusation concerning James Webb is noteworthy. In a language model, information is not extracted from lists of facts and spoken, but rather generated by highly sophisticated systems for completing sentences. Sentences from the recent past may be more error-prone than typical for an AI because the information in them hasn't been written as many times. This is probably one of the reasons ChatGPT's model won't tell you much beyond 2021. (Opens in a new tab). https://ejtandemonium.com/
This blunder highlights the persistent issue of all generative AI solutions discarding truth value, which could be a solid incentive for users to stick with traditional search engines. Microsoft is working on incorporating a ChatGPT-like answer engine into its Bing search engine, however as Microsoft notes(Opens in a new tab), "Bing will sometimes misrepresent the information it discovers, and you may receive responses that sound plausible but are incomplete, wrong, or unsuitable." http://sentrateknikaprima.com/
Big Tech is trying to compete with OpenAI's ChatGPT, the amazing AI chatbot that is also the fastest-growing app ever. According to a Google blog post, Google's entry, Bard, will be launched "in the next weeks(Opens in a new tab)," but it's already nailing its impersonation of ChatGPT by creating false information.
Google's blog post introducing Bard includes an animated graphic designed to demonstrate the Bard user experience, and, to cut a long story short, the AI in it incorrectly asserts that the James Webb Space Telescope captured the first ever image of an exoplanet. Google also tweeted the animation, along with this statement.
Webb took its first image of an exoplanet in September of last year (Opens in a new tab), but it wasn't the first image of any exoplanet - that occurred in 2004. (Opens in a new tab).
It's unclear what transpired, but the timeliness of Bard's accusation concerning James Webb is noteworthy. In a language model, information is not extracted from lists of facts and spoken, but rather generated by highly sophisticated systems for completing sentences. Sentences from the recent past may be more error-prone than typical for an AI because the information in them hasn't been written as many times. This is probably one of the reasons ChatGPT's model won't tell you much beyond 2021. (Opens in a new tab). https://ejtandemonium.com/
This blunder highlights the persistent issue of all generative AI solutions discarding truth value, which could be a solid incentive for users to stick with traditional search engines. Microsoft is working on incorporating a ChatGPT-like answer engine into its Bing search engine, however as Microsoft notes(Opens in a new tab), "Bing will sometimes misrepresent the information it discovers, and you may receive responses that sound plausible but are incomplete, wrong, or unsuitable." http://sentrateknikaprima.com/