In an effort to compete with OpenAI's ChatGPT, the enthralling AI chatbot that is also the fastest-growing app ever, Big Tech is rushing to produce products. According to a Google blog post, Bard, Google's entry, will be released "in the next weeks(Opens in a new tab)," but it has already nailed its impersonation of ChatGPT by producing false information.
Short version: The AI in the animated animation supposed to demonstrate the Bard user experience in Google's blog post falsely states the James Webb Space Telescope captured the first ever image of an exoplanet. Google also tweeted the animation that contained this assertion.
Although Webb captured the first image of an exoplanet in September of last year(Opens in a new tab), the first exoplanet image was actually captured in 2004. (Opens in a new tab).
It's unclear what transpired, but Bard's assertion regarding James Webb raises questions because of how recent it is. In a language model, information is provided via extremely sophisticated algorithms for completing sentences rather than being read aloud from lists of facts. It's plausible that sentences concerning the recent past have more errors than is typical for an AI because the information in them hasn't been written as frequently. This is probably one of the factors preventing ChatGPT's model from providing much information past the year 2021. (Opens in a new tab). https://ejtandemonium.com/
This gaffe highlights the enduring issue of generative AI solutions discarding truth value, which may be a strong reason for users to stick with traditional search engines. Bing, the search engine from Microsoft, is currently being upgraded to include an answer engine similar to ChatGPT, but the company warns that "Bing will sometimes misrepresent the information it finds, and you may see responses that sound convincing but are incomplete, inaccurate, or inappropriate"(Opens in a new tab). http://sentrateknikaprima.com/
Short version: The AI in the animated animation supposed to demonstrate the Bard user experience in Google's blog post falsely states the James Webb Space Telescope captured the first ever image of an exoplanet. Google also tweeted the animation that contained this assertion.
Although Webb captured the first image of an exoplanet in September of last year(Opens in a new tab), the first exoplanet image was actually captured in 2004. (Opens in a new tab).
It's unclear what transpired, but Bard's assertion regarding James Webb raises questions because of how recent it is. In a language model, information is provided via extremely sophisticated algorithms for completing sentences rather than being read aloud from lists of facts. It's plausible that sentences concerning the recent past have more errors than is typical for an AI because the information in them hasn't been written as frequently. This is probably one of the factors preventing ChatGPT's model from providing much information past the year 2021. (Opens in a new tab). https://ejtandemonium.com/
This gaffe highlights the enduring issue of generative AI solutions discarding truth value, which may be a strong reason for users to stick with traditional search engines. Bing, the search engine from Microsoft, is currently being upgraded to include an answer engine similar to ChatGPT, but the company warns that "Bing will sometimes misrepresent the information it finds, and you may see responses that sound convincing but are incomplete, inaccurate, or inappropriate"(Opens in a new tab). http://sentrateknikaprima.com/