AI-powered Bing made several mistakes in its demo

New Delhi US-based artificial intelligence (AI) researcher Dmitri Brereton claims that Microsoft’s new AI-powered Bing search engine made several errors and generated gimmicky information during its demo last week.

Unveiled on February 7 by chief executive officer Satya Nadella, the new Bing uses Generative Pre-trend Transformer 3 (GPT-3) and promises users a ChatGPT-like experience within search.

At the unveiling event, Yusuf Mehdi, chief consumer marketing officer, also gave a demo of how the new Bing will handle searches and answer user queries.

It made several mistakes during the demo, worse than Google’s Bard mistake,” Brereton said in a Twitter post. He also claimed that the Bing AI made a mistake again when summarizing a financial document and misspelled most of the numbers. found wrong.

It’s important to note that last week we announced a preview of this new experience. We are expecting that the system may make mistakes during this preview period, and user feedback is important to help us identify where things are not working well so that we can learn and improve the model. Can help We’re committed to improving the quality of this experience over time and making it a helpful and inclusive tool for everyone,” said a Microsoft spokesperson.

Brereton also published a blog post summarizing all the errors the new Bing made during the demo.

Bing AI did a great job of creating media hype, but their product is no better than Google’s Bard. At least as far as we can tell from the limited information we have about both, Brereton said in the blog post.

AI-powered Bing isn’t the only Transformer-based search and chat platform to have made errors in its demo. Last week, Google unveiled Bard, its AI chatbot based on the Language Model for Dialog Applications (LaMDA), which made an error during a demo. Bard claimed in the demo that the James Webb Space Telescope was the first to photograph a planet outside Earth’s solar system, which was quickly debunked by space experts.

Google parent Alphabet’s shares fell 7.7% last week, wiping $100 billion off its market value after Bard discovered the error and reported it by Reuters.

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