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Google scrambles to manually remove weird AI answers in search
Submitted 5 months ago by bot@lemmy.smeargle.fans [bot] to hackernews@lemmy.smeargle.fans
https://www.theverge.com/2024/5/24/24164119/google-ai-overview-mistakes-search-race-openai
Comments
trevor@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 months ago
snootchiebootchies@lemmynsfw.com 5 months ago
What did Weird Al ever do to Google
autotldr@lemmings.world [bot] 5 months ago
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Social media is abuzz with examples of Google’s new AI Overview product saying weird stuff, from telling users to put glue on their pizza to suggesting they eat rocks.
It’s an odd situation, since Google has been testing AI Overviews for a year now — the feature launched in beta in May 2023 as the Search Generative Experience — and CEO Sundar Pichai has said the company served over a billion queries in that time.
But Pichai has also said that Google’s brought the cost of delivering AI answers down by 80 percent over that same time, “driven by hardware, engineering and technical breakthroughs.” It appears that kind of optimization might have happened too early, before the tech was ready.
“A company once known for being at the cutting edge and shipping high-quality stuff is now known for low-quality output that’s getting meme’d,” one AI founder, who wished to remain anonymous, told The Verge.
Farnsworth also confirmed that the company is “taking swift action” to remove AI Overviews on certain queries “where appropriate under our content policies, and using these examples to develop broader improvements to our systems, some of which have already started to roll out.”
Marcus points out that in 2022, Meta released an AI system called Galactica that had to be taken down shortly after its launch because, among other things, it told people to eat glass.
The original article contains 648 words, the summary contains 230 words. Saved 65%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
pelespirit@sh.itjust.works 5 months ago
This kind of reminds me of Google Glasses. It was a really cool product made for and by tech bros who live in a freaky little bubble. They’re not used to normal people who just want to search how to treat a sports injury so they don’t have to pay $800 bucks to see a doctor about it.