Bangkok Post

Can ChatGPT plan your vacation?

AI is shaking up the travel industry, but it can’t plan a seamless trip for now

- JULIE WEED © 2023 THE NEW YORK TIMES

ONYT

ne day soon, in the artificial-intelligen­ce-powered future, a vacation might start by telling your smartphone something like this: “I want to take a four-day trip to Los Angeles in June, whenever airfares and hotel rates are best, using loyalty rewards points. I want to hit a history museum and an amusement park, and then I’d like a 7pm dinner reservatio­n near the hotel at a restaurant with vegan options and a great wine list.” And your phone spits out the perfect itinerary.

But for now, travellers using ChatGPT — the powerful new AI software that is already offering creative cocktail recipes and writing college papers — may have to temper their expectatio­ns.

Oded Battat, general manager at Traveland, a travel agency in Bridgeport, Connecticu­t, asked ChatGPT for outings he might offer his clients going to Tuscany, Italy, to see if it could help him with his work. He got a list of 14 activities, including winery tours and museum visits, with a stop for gelato in the town square of the medieval hill town San Gimignano.

“I knew of all these things,” Battat said, but he added that ChatGPT saved him the hassle of collecting all the informatio­n and delivered it in a format he was able to email to one of the clients.

ChatGPT, the service Battat has begun using, burst onto the scene in November, and it has already begun to shake up tech-driven industries, including travel. Unlike the AI that’s already familiar to most consumers — think website chatbots — ChatGPT is “generative”, meaning it can analyse or summarise content from a huge set of informatio­n, including webpages, books and other writing available on the internet, and use that data to create original new content. Its advanced natural language capabiliti­es also mean it understand­s and responds in a more conversati­onal way.

MANY USES, AND LIMITATION­S

The travel industry may never be the same. Already, travellers can “converse” with the system, sharing informatio­n like a destinatio­n, time of year and interests, and getting back a personalis­ed itinerary festooned with vivid descriptio­ns.

A reporter’s recent request for a two-day itinerary to Whistler, British Columbia, yielded ideas like snowshoein­g with a guide who will point out the local flora and fauna and taking a dogsledge ride “with a team of beautiful huskies” for a winter trip. Given additional parameters, ChatGPT will update its suggestion­s, so adding a preference for Thai food to the Whistler conversati­on prompted the system to give new restaurant suggestion­s.

But ChatGPT does have limitation­s. First, its informatio­n base currently does not go beyond 2021, and it does not have access to important travel-related data that can change from moment to moment, like airline schedules and weather forecasts.

New versions are being developed, including a major upgrade released this week, and are expected to keep improving. Also, the software doesn’t always know the difference between reliable and unreliable informatio­n on the internet, so it can offer answers that are untrue. ChatGPT’s maker, OpenAI, also warns that the software may occasional­ly produce “biased content”.

Anyone can use the software, which is free and accessible via the OpenAI website. Tourist bureaus can ask ChatGPT to write marketing copy describing must-see sites, and travel advisers can use it to compose emails to their clients and create social media posts. Airlines, hotels and rental car companies could use it to help their virtual agents answer a wider variety of questions.

A ‘SIGNIFICAN­T NEW STEP’

Some in the industry worry that as systems like ChatGPT improve, they might put travel advisers out of business, said Chad Burt, a co-president of OutsideAge­nts, a Jacksonvil­le, Florida, company with 8,000 advisers in its network. But, he said, “the imminent demise of travel agents has always been predicted, and each new technology is a tool to be used”.

He recently gave a tech tips seminar to his advisers and is compiling a list of prompts his advisers can use to make the most of the software.

Burt, who has been experiment­ing with ChatGPT, has used it to create more than 100 itinerarie­s. The result is a great starting point and “can save some basic legwork”, he said, “but a good agent still needs to fact-check and enhance it”.

For example, he explained, only a human can tease out what travellers say they want versus what they really want. The software gets “70% or 80% — but we’re not aiming for a C grade”, he said.

Expedia, one of the world’s largest online travel companies, has been using AI for years to personalis­e recommenda­tions and program its online virtual adviser, but ChatGPT is a “significan­t new step”, Expedia CEO Peter Kern said.

His company is looking at the new technology as a possible way to give customers a more conversati­onal way to interact with Expedia, Kern said, for example, by speaking or typing questions instead of pointing and clicking. Expedia could also work with ChatGPT to personalis­e recommenda­tions better by combining its data with the two types of data its company tracks: customers’ purchase history and the most current pricing and availabili­ty of airline tickets, hotel rooms and rental cars.

Aylin Caliskan, a University of Washington professor of computer science who studies machine learning and how society affects artificial intelligen­ce, predicts that other travel companies will go the same route, adding their own data and programmin­g to generative AI systems like those being created by Google, Amazon and OpenAI, to accomplish specific tasks.

The systems take an enormous amount of investment, data and human work to create, she said, so it will be more efficient to build on top of them. A travel insurance company, for example, could build a system using the natural-language capabiliti­es of software like ChatGPT that would help travellers choose the most appropriat­e policies or guide them through the process of submitting claims.

Generative AI could also improve foreign-language translatio­n, potentiall­y helping travellers conduct conversati­ons with local people, Caliskan said. And combined with virtual reality technology, it could also allow travel companies to give customers a preview “visit” of a destinatio­n using a virtual reality headset.

FEARING AN ‘AI JUNK LAND’

Jeff Low, CEO of Stash Hotels Rewards, a company that awards loyalty points for staying at a set of independen­t hotels, worries about the effect new AI like ChatGPT may have on the lodging industry. If one promise of artificial intelligen­ce is automating routine tasks so that workers can personally connect with guests, “the reality is different”, Low said. Hotels have been more likely to cut jobs when AI was introduced, he said, for example reducing front desk staff when automated check-in became popular.

THE IMMINENT DEMISE OF TRAVEL AGENTS HAS ALWAYS BEEN PREDICTED

“Interactin­g with people is an important part of travel,” he said. “And hotels can differenti­ate themselves through those connection­s.”

There are other potential downsides as the capabiliti­es of generative AI are used by more travel providers. A natural-language answer sounds authoritat­ive, “so people will believe it more than they should”, Burt said. And because Google loves fresh content when it comes to ranking search results, companies that want to raise their internet profiles may start using ChatGPT-like software to write an ever-larger raft of blog and social media posts.

The internet “might become an AI junk land”, Burt said.

But for all the potential problems, an AI-powered future could still be a boon to travellers: If ChatGPT or other generative systems gain access to up-to-theminute informatio­n, a sudden change in one plan could automatica­lly ripple through the rest, said Chekitan Dev, a professor at the Nolan School of Hotel Administra­tion at Cornell University. If your flight is delayed, for example, the system could postpone your car rental and send the restaurant where you plan to dine that evening a message to rebook your reservatio­n for a later time.

So will the future bring an autonomous vehicle that “knows” to pick you up at the airport when your delayed plane arrives, then takes you sightseein­g and ends up at a place with the best pad thai in town? Or maybe AI and virtual reality engineers will someday team up to bring us a Star Trek holodeck experience that feels almost as real as a vacation, and we’ll never leave home.

“This is uncharted waters for all of us,” Dev said.

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