Google has made available to the public its experimental Artificial Intelligence (AI) chatbot, and you can now register to chat with the AI-driven bot trained on the company’s contentious language model.
Google has already cautioned that preliminary versions of its LaMDA (Language Model for Dialogue Applications) model may display incorrect or inappropriate content.
Google’s AI Test Kitchen app allows users to learn about, experiment with, and provide feedback on Google’s emerging AI technology.
Our shared goal is to responsibly learn, enhance, and innovate in the field of Artificial Intelligence. We’ll gradually open up to small groups of people, the company said.
‘AI Test Kitchen,’ according to Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai, is meant for giving you a taste of what it might be like having LaMDA in your hands. The ability of these language models to generate infinite possibilities demonstrates their potential, but it also implies that they don’t always get things right.
And, while the latest version of LaMDA has made significant improvements in terms of safety and accuracy, we are still at the start of a journey Google stated. The AI Test Kitchen now has multiple layers of security. This work has reduced the risk, but not eliminated, it added.
Google and Meta (formerly Facebook) have both revealed their AI conversational chatbots and have asked the public for feedback.
The initial reports are frightening, as the Meta chatbot BlenderBot 3 believes Mark Zuckerberg is “creepy and manipulative,” and Donald Trump will always be president of the United States.
Last week, Meta stated that all conversational AI chatbots are known to occasionally mimic and generate unsafe, biased, or offensive remarks. BlenderBot can still make rude or offensive comments, which is why we are gathering feedback to help enhance future chatbots, the company said in a blog post.
Google fired an engineer last month for violating a confidentiality agreement after he claimed that the tech giant’s conversation AI is “sentient” since it has feelings, emotions, and subjective experiences.
Lemoine also interviewed LaMDA, who provided surprising responses.