According to Reuters, Alphabet (Alphabet) lost about $100 billion in market value at the close on Wednesday due to false information provided by an AI-based chatbot (Cool) that appeared in a promotional video released by Google. It's a press conference. Announced (awesome) last Tuesday.
The video shows an example of a question a robot can answer: "What new ideas can I share with my 9-year-old son about the James Webb Telescope?"
The answer is in the form of simplified points as the question arises, except that it contains an error as stated in one of the points (James Webb) that took the first picture of a planet outside our solar system. But people quickly caught the glitch, including astronomers, who have tweeted about their displeasure with Google since the first such image was taken in 2004, according to the NASA website.
As investors lost faith in the accuracy of Google's AI-powered search results and caused Google's market share to drop, Microsoft shares rose a day after the company announced its AI model to run its Bing search engine wanted to merge by 3%.
Google and Microsoft plan to integrate their new models with their search engines, allowing users to ask natural language questions to get straight, short answers that appear alongside traditional search results.
Many followers have expressed concerns that AI bots are providing inaccurate results. After search engines were considered as a reliable source of information, many people became concerned that they might get incorrect information about their search terms.
In an initial response, Google said in a statement to The Verge that this "demonstrates the importance of rigorous testing, something we started with in the Trusted Tester program," referring to the company's plans to make it one that allows a group of users to test their new service and give their opinion. A company spokesperson added that it will collect user feedback and subjective opinions to improve the software.
And Google mentioned, in its article announcing the launch of its smart robot, that (Bad) is currently working on a lighter version of its language model that is smaller and uses less processing power, which will help Google to provide services. Get feedback and suggestions from more users. more quickly.
It should be noted that each new version of the engine from Google and its competitor Microsoft is always in a small beta stage, which is not yet available to all users.