Beyond ChatGPT: what chatbots mean for the future

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Whether it’s turning on its creator in “Ex Machina”... ...or looking for love in “AI” or “Her”... Hello, I’m here Artificial intelligence permeates Hollywood’s blockbusters I’ll be back But now, with the arrival of chatbots like ChatGPT... ...suddenly AI seems a lot closer to fact than fiction This has caused more excitement in the tech world... ...than anything for several years But it’s still hard to separate the hype... ...from the fear-mongering... ...and informed concerns Homogenised, simple responses that are wrong To me that leads to some form of dystopia So what do the new AI chatbots mean for the future of the internet... ...and our relationship with machines? What is a chatbot? Think of it like an internet search engine, although it works differently To the user, it’s a text box where you type questions It’s what it does next that makes it so special Chatbots have been around for a while You’ve probably talked to a really rubbish one at your bank... ...or maybe your mobile operator... ...but they’ve suddenly got a lot better... ...because of a new technology called generative AI And this technology involves basically giving lots of examples... ...of either images or text to a machine-learning system... ...and it then learns to generate its own If you use that in a chatbot, you get a much, much cleverer chatbot Chatbots are trained on billions of texts from the internet This allows them to learn which words are most likely... ...to follow other words in a sentence about any given subject These chatbots are essentially like a very sophisticated version... ...of the autocomplete on your phone or on your email So they’re kind of constantly playing the game of what’s the next word? It sounds very simple, but it can produce these surprisingly lifelike... ...and intelligent-sounding results And they don’t just answer questions Generative AI chatbots can write essays, poems or songs Some can even produce art or music from text prompts But it’s the possibility that these new chatbots might disrupt... ...the lucrative search-engine business that’s been making waves lately For most people, search engines, and Google in particular... ...are sort of the front door of the internet... ...and this has been true for about 25 years If you want to look something up or find something out... ...that’s where you go first But if you want to, I don’t know, figure out where to go on holiday... ...or understand the meaning of a technical term or get help writing an essay... ...then a chatbot might actually be more useful than a search engine Silicon Valley is taking note With Google’s revenue from search ads in 2021... ...reaching around $150bn... ...there’s a lot at stake Microsoft and Google are adding chat functions to their existing search engines And further afield, China’s Baidu has followed suit Last year, venture capital investment in generative AI totalled over $1bn Investors are hoping with this new tech, someone could steal Google’s crown But not everyone is convinced John Henshaw is the senior director of search engine optimisation at Vimeo It’s his job to know search Conversational AI is a solution in search of a problem We don’t actually need it Google already uses machine learning and AI For accuracy, for factual information, to understand concepts Conversational AI doesn’t do that If chatbots don’t check facts, they can’t be relied on for search A big problem with these AI chatbots is that they just sometimes get things wrong What it’s doing is just sort of reflecting back to us stuff that’s already on the internet It can sometimes combine different sources... ...to produce claims that aren’t actually true When this happens, it’s known as a hallucination Just like when a human hallucinates... ...a chatbot hallucination can seem realistic... ...but may in fact have no basis in reality This is hardly surprising given that chatbots are trained on text from the internet... ...and a lot of what’s written online isn’t true All these chatbots are doing is putting one word after another... ...based on the billions of words that they’ve already read on the internet... ...so they don’t really know anything or understand anything... ...and they have no idea of right or wrong or true or false And that’s a problem A chatbot doesn’t know the difference between an academic paper... ...and a fictional short story, so it’ll give both equal weight when giving you an answer... ...that it presents as fully accurate And because they don’t know what they’re saying... ...chatbots can demonstrate other strange behaviours Your chatbot at some point could express its love for you... ...if that’s how you continue prompting it... ...through a longer-term interaction And like with anything, when you start to bond with someone... ...even if it’s an AI, you expect and want and desire... ...the bond in return Ayanna Howard is an expert in AI... ...and a roboticist at Ohio State University The way chatbots can change how we interact with machines... ...has been concerning her profession for some time As far back as 1966... ...a computer scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology... ...Joseph Weizenbaum, described something called the “ELIZA effect” ELIZA was a project that was designed by an MIT professor He simulated a psychotherapist named Carl Rogers... ...who did things like reflective thinking and reflective listening So if I said, Oh, gosh, I’m having a bad day... ...ELIZA would say, So tell me about this bad day Volunteers interacting with ELIZA appeared to develop feelings for it... ...even though they knew it was a machine Weizenbaum was so disturbed by what he saw... ...he became an open critic of AI Language and communication is how we build bonds with each other So between humans and humans... ...we can basically evoke certain reactions... ...by triggering either a positive or a negative emotional response This behaviour can be learned... ...and so the chatbots of today... ...and continuously the chatbots of tomorrow... ...given that they understand language it would be very easy... ...to increase the bonds so that people actually believe... ...that they have a friendship or they have a relationship... ...with these chatbots In 2015 my best friend passed away... ...and I found myself going back to our text messages... ...trying to remember him and how it was back when he was alive The ELIZA effect can also be an opportunity I used some of the AI models... ...we built to recreate my friend to be able to continue to talk to him as an AI When Eugenia Kuyda recreated her best friend Roman as a chatbot... ...it was originally a personal project But she soon realised... ...it wasn’t just her that could benefit from the companionship AI can offer We saw that maybe there is a demand... ...and need for something that would be available to talk... ...24/7 about anything... ...that’s on your mind without being afraid of being judged Eugenia’s company, Replika, offers paying customers... ...an AI companion in the form of a chatbot within a humanoid avatar It’s a popular service with over 2m active users to date... ...and it’s gaining in popularity Until recently there was even an option for bots to send not-safe-for work messages Users know they’re chatting with a bot... ...but some still have feelings for their virtual friends or girlfriends I think in the next ten years someone will build... ...something like “Her”, in a way, or Joi from “Blade Runner” Do you want to dance or you want to open your present? What present? Every one of us will have this AI companion that’s always there with us... ...that you can talk to about your personal things... ...but also do things together with and watch Netflix in the evening together... ...and plan vacations and so on Hi, I’m an avatar of Alex who directed this film If you’re enjoying watching it... ...you might be interested to know that Economist subscribers... ...get access to a wealth of global analysis on every conceivable topic You can read it, you can listen to it... ...you can even be part of it... ...at live webinars For the best deal on a subscription, click on the link And now on with the film While an AI companion might not be for everyone... ...in the future we’ll all still probably frequently interact with chatbots... ...but in a more mundane way Your call is important to us Customer-service representatives don’t always get respect when doing their job... ...but unlike humans, bots have infinite patience Soon it might be more common to chat to a bot online than a human... ...and increasingly hard to tell the difference There’s this idea of the Turing test, which is... ...can you tell whether text is coming from a machine... ...or from a real person? And we’re already at a situation where machines can pass the Turing test... ...they do seem to be convincing as humans Counterfeiting humans could be especially helpful... ...for customer-facing websites Every single website with someone who’s willing to pay... ...would have their own chatbot... ...and so it would be customised to your customers And these chatbots won’t just be supplying us with information They’ll also be doing things for us Jarvis, are you there? At your service, sir It might still be some years before we get to Jarvis from the “Iron Man” films... ...but generative artificial intelligence... ...could make AI assistants much more common in the future Chatbots could become the new way of getting things done Things like booking flights... ...or finding a time where three or four people can have a meeting... ...and then booking the meeting in your calendar So chatbots could be a more convenient way of doing that When combined with a voice assistant... ...the result could be Siri on steroids... ...and it could change how we use the internet forever... ...by making it easier... ...for people to access the wealth of information and services available online But currently chatbots aren’t quite reliable enough to be left to their own devices And there are bigger worries too The fact that it’s taking everybody else’s information... ...to me is an extreme form of copyright infringement I see that as being ripe for lawsuits Picture stock archive Getty Images is currently suing Stable Diffusion... ...a text-to-image AI generator, for scraping its content to produce its work... ...and trademark infringement Other artists are suing other AI art generators... ...for collaging their work without consent When it comes to text... ...chatbots may just parrot existing books or articles without any citation... ...amounting to plagiarism And that’s not the only problem I wish that copyright infringement... ...was my only concern with conversational AI But it’s not. My biggest concern is its ability to make things up Chatbots get things wrong a lot of the time... ...yet present what they’re saying as truth If enough people use them, this could allow falsehoods... ...and misinformation to spread at a rapid rate Chatbots have already come under fire... ...for putting forward racist... ...or otherwise bigoted opinions based on what they’ve read online This tendency could be exploited Chatbots could be used to implement the approach favoured by... ...Vladimir Putin and Steve Bannon, which is called “flood the zone”... ...or flood the zone with shit... ...and this is where you put out so much misinformation about something... ...that the truth is actually drowned out And if you can generate misinformation more easily using chatbots... ...then that becomes much easier The problem of online misinformation could be just getting started... ...but it’s not just the falsehoods worrying people The proliferation of chatbots could be detrimental... ...to the internet in another way I think that society has the most to lose with the embrace... ...of conversational AI It’s going to reduce our ability to learn and research... ...and have critical thought If you can only chat with something and get a response back... ...then you’re essentially doing away with the open web You are doing away with actually having choices To me, that leads to some form of dystopia People might be less inclined to post good stuff on the internet... ...because they’ll worry that it’s all just going to get hoovered up by a chatbot... ...and regurgitated to other people If the best bits are just going to be served up directly by a chatbot... ...then you might say, Well, what’s the point? Why should I post anything at all? There’s a danger that the internet might become a less vibrant space Whatever happens, one thing seems certain... ...people will not only be talking to their machines more... ...but the machines will be talking back The train has left the train station... ...and is going at 150 miles per hour You are not going to stop it What would be a good concluding... ...thought for this film in the style of The Economist? As chatbots become more prevalent... ...we must grapple with the complex... ...implications of their impact on society Balancing their potential benefits with the need to preserve... ...our humanity will be a crucial challenge for the future You heard it here first Do you think your job’s at risk? I don’t think my job’s at risk Thanks for watching If you want to read more of our analysis of what generative AI... ...chatbots could mean for the future, click on the link And don’t forget to subscribe
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Channel: The Economist
Views: 407,471
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: The Economist, Economist, Economist Films, Economist Videos, Politics, News, short-documentary, artificial intelligence robot, ai, artificial intelligence documentary, artificial intelligence uprising, robot, robots, artificial intelligence, what is artificial intelligence, ai robots, google ai robot, what is chatgpt, chat gpt, openai chatgpt, chatgpt explained, chat gpt explained, chatgpt coding, chatgpt tutorial, what is chatgpt and who is behind it, how to use chatgpt, open ai
Id: dctcfxw13AQ
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 16min 8sec (968 seconds)
Published: Thu Mar 23 2023
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