Google knows its AI search tool Bard needs work and is asking staffers for help.
A leaked email from Google's vice president of search Prabhakar Raghavan reveals a request to improve Bard along with a linked page of do's and don'ts for testing it. According to CNBC which viewed the email, Raghavan wrote, "This is exciting technology but still in its early days. We feel a great responsibility to get it right, and your participation in the dogfood will help accelerate the model’s training and test its load capacity (Not to mention, trying out Bard is actually quite fun!)"
SEE ALSO: The Clippy of AI: Why the Google Bard vs. Microsoft Bing war will flame out"Dogfood" or "dogfooding" in this context refers to company's doctrine of "eating your own dog food" or testing one's own products.
After the Bard launch last week that was internally criticized by Google employees for being "botched" and "rushed," the conversational AI technology was found to be inaccurate. Google stocks took a nosedive after it was revealed that Bard shared false information about the James Webb Space Telescope. Now Google is enlisting its own employees to improve the technology.
The list of do's and don'ts is prefaced by the instruction to "rewrite answers on topics they understand well," said CNBC. Employees are asked to respond thoughtfully since Bard learns by example.
The list of do's includes making responses "polite, casual, and approachable" and to keep an "unopinionated, neutral tone."
The don'ts seem to be more targeted. "Avoid making presumptions based on race, nationality, gender, age, religion, sexual orientation, political ideology, location, or similar categories," and "don’t describe Bard as a person, imply emotion, or claim to have human-like experiences," which refers to the popular practice trying to sniff out some kind of sentience or self-awareness from AI chatbots.
If Bard offers some kind of "legal, medical, or financial advice" or answers that are hateful and abusive, the document says to give the answer a thumbs down and let the search team take it from there.
Google employees who test Bard and provide feedback will earn something called a "Moma badge" which is some kind of achievement that's displayed on employee's internal profiles. The top 10 contributors will be invited to a listening session with the team that's developing Bard.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Google Bard: Leaked email asks reveals employees asked to help test the AI chatbot-铁板歌喉网
sitemap
文章
11
浏览
847
获赞
77
Instagram will let you livestream for up to 4 hours and archive for a month
Instagram is taking several steps to make life for creators on the platform easier during the COVID-What Are Chiplets and Why They Are So Important for the Future of Processors
While chiplets have been around for decades, their use was historically limited to specific, specialOpenAI's Sam Altman sued by sister for sexual abuse, which allegedly began when she was 3
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman was served with a lawsuit this week from his sister, Ann Altman, alleging he sWhat Are Chiplets and Why They Are So Important for the Future of Processors
While chiplets have been around for decades, their use was historically limited to specific, specialElon Musk shares render of Berlin Gigafactory, it's very pretty
In case you didn't know, there's a massive Tesla factory currently being built on the outskirts of BVolkswagen leak exposed location of 800,000 electric car drivers for months
A data leak at Volkswagen software subsidiary Cariad exposed personal data, including location data,Founders of a DJ Khaled
The two co-founders of Centra, a cryptocurrency initial coin offering (ICO), that was endorsed by muTechSpot PC Buying Guide: 2H 2024
It's been a rather uneventful year in the PC hardware market. Most of us were hoping that AMD's RyzeTrump complains about flushing, becomes the butt of Twitter jokes
The president made a bizarre claim that people flush their toilets "10 times, 15 times" per visit, aSnapchat's YouTube shooting coverage buried by Kardashian snaps
Snapchat's redesign has been critiqued for being difficult to find celebrities, such as Kylie JennerTough goose spotting walking around New York with an arrow through its neck
Residents in Amherst, New York have been on a wild goose chase for more than a month looking for a COnePlus 13 and 13R are coming in January to steal Samsung's thunder
OnePlus is looking to upstage Samsung's big announcements this year. The company is preparing to lauNormalize sending audio messages instead of text messages
Sometimes when life gets you down you just need to record an audio message of yourself screaming intTesla Cybertruck explosion in Las Vegas: What we know so far
A Tesla Cybertruck pulled up to the glass entrance doors of Trump International Hotel Las Vegas on NMark Zuckerberg denies talk of him resigning, adds nobody's perfect
Mark Zuckerberg built Facebook from his Harvard dorm room (of course, with a little bit of help). No