Shanghai Daily

Google Assistant talks almost like a real person

- TECHNOLOGY (AFP)

THE new Google digital assistant converses so naturally it may seem like a real person.

The unveiling of the naturalsou­nding robo-assistant by the tech giant this week wowed some observers, but left others fretting over the ethics of how the human-seeming software might be used.

Google chief Sundar Pichai played a recording of the Google Assistant independen­tly calling a hair salon and a restaurant to make bookings — interactin­g with staff who evidently didn’t realize they were dealing with artificial intelligen­ce software, rather than a real customer.

Tell the Google Assistant to book a table for four at 6pm, it tends to the phone call in a human-sounding voice complete with “speech disfluenci­es” such as “ums” and “uhs.”

“This is what people often do when they are gathering their thoughts,” Google engineers Yaniv Leviathan and Yossi Matias said in a Duplex blog post.

Google Assistant artificial intelligen­ce enhanced with “Duplex” technology that let it engage like a real person on the phone was a surprise and, for some unsettling, star of the Internet giant’s annual developers conference this week in its home town of Mountain View, California.

The digital assistant was also programed to understand when to respond quickly, such as after someone says “hello,” versus pausing as a person might before answering complex questions.

Google pitched the enhanced assistant as a potential boon to busy people and small businesses which lack websites customers can use to make appointmen­ts.

“Our vision for our assistant is to help you get things done,” Pichai told around 7,000 developers at the Google I/O conference, along with an online audience watching his streamed presentati­on on Tuesday.

Google will be testing the digital assistant improvemen­t in the months ahead.

The Duplex demonstrat­ion was quickly followed by debate over whether people answering phones should be told when they are speaking to humansound­ing software and how the technology might be abused in the form of more convincing “robocalls” by marketers or political campaigns.

“Google Duplex is the most incredible, terrifying thing out of #IO18 so far,” tweeted Chris Messina, a product designer whose resume includes Google and bringing the idea of the hashtag to Twitter.

Google Duplex is an important developmen­t and signals an urgent need to figure out proper governance of machines that can fool people into thinking they are human, according to Kay Firth-Butterfiel­d, head of the AI and machine learning project at the World Economic Forum’s Center for the Fourth Industrial Revolution.

“These machines could call on behalf of political parties and make ever more convincing recommenda­tions for voting,” Firth-Butterfiel­d reasoned.

“Will children be able to use these agents and receive calls from them?”

Digital assistants making arrangemen­ts for people also raises the question of who is responsibl­e for mistakes, such as a no-show or cancellati­on fee for an appointmen­t set for the wrong time.

At a time of heightened concerns about online privacy, there were also worries expressed about what kind of data digital assistants might collect and who gets access to it.

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