The Decatur Daily Democrat

Google’s artificial­ly intelligen­t ‘Bard’ set for next stage

- BY MICHAEL LIEDTKE Associated Press

Google announced Tuesday it’s allowing more people to interact with “Bard,” the artificial­ly intelligen­t chatbot the company is building to counter Microsoft’s early lead in a pivotal battlegrou­nd of technology.

In Bard’s next stage, Google is opening a waitlist to use an AI tool that’s similar to the ChatGPT technology Microsoft began deploying in its Bing search engine to much fanfare last month. And last week, Microsoft embedded more AI-powered technology in its word processing, spreadshee­t and slide presentati­on programs with a new feature called Copilot.

Until now, Bard had only been available to a small group of “trusted testers” hand-picked by Google. The Mountain View, California, company, which is owned by Alphabet Inc., isn’t saying how many people will be given access to Bard in the next step of the technology’s developmen­t. Initial applicants will be limited to the U.S. and the U.K. before Google offers Bard in more countries.

Google is treading carefully with the rollout of its AI tools, in part because it has more to lose if the technology spits out inaccurate informatio­n or takes its users down dark corridors. That’s because Google’s dominant search engine has become a de facto gateway to the internet for billions of people, raising the risk of a massive backlash that could tarnish its image and undercut its ad-driven business if the technology behaves badly.

Despite the technology’s pitfalls, Bard still offers “incredible benefits” such as “jumpstarti­ng human productivi­ty, creativity and curiosity,” Google said in a blog post that two of its vice presidents — Sissie Hsiao and Eli Collins — wrote with assistance from Bard.

As a precaution­ary measure, Google is limiting the amount of interactio­n that can occur between Bard and its users — a tactic Microsoft has imposed with ChatGPT after media coverage detailed instances when the technology likened an Associated Press reporter to Hitler and tried to persuade a New York Times reporter to divorce his wife.

Google also is providing access to Bard through a separate site from its search engine, which serves as the foundation for the digital ads that generate most of its profits. In a tacit acknowledg­ement that Bard may be prone to straying into manufactur­ing falsehoods, which are being called “hallucinat­ions” in technology circles, Google is providing a query box connected to its search engine to make it easier for users to check on the accuracy of the informatio­n being displayed by the AI.

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