Microsoft is once again testing the AI chat bot waters

Shawn Knight

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Microsoft is once again testing the AI chat bot waters with Zo, a seemingly reworked bot that was recently discovered on Kik by Twitter user Tom Hounsell.

As you may remember, Microsoft’s first at bat – a chat bot named Tay – didn’t even last a full 24 hours before the Redmond-based company took it offline. Turns out, letting an impressionable chat bot designed to mimic a 19-year-old girl loose across multiple platforms on the Internet isn’t all that great of an idea.

Within hours, Tay was spewing racist comments left and right, offending hordes of people in the process.

According to MSPoweruser, Zo is best described as a censored version of Tay or an English variant of Xiaoice, Microsoft’s Chinese chat bot. It’s apparently pretty good at normal conversation although if you try to steer the conversation toward a controversial topic like politics, it’ll politely decline to engage.

Limiting Zo to Kik is likely a wise move as well. This gives Microsoft an opportunity to further fine-tune the bot before opening it up to popular social networks with more active users like Twitter and GroupMe. How long that’ll take, however, is anyone’s guess, especially considering Microsoft hasn't yet officially announced Zo (someone just stumbled upon it).

Lead image courtesy maxuser, Shutterstock

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So how long until this one starts quoting Hitler? Or are they trying for a more red approach, and quoting Stalin this time?

"Microsoft is once again testing the AI chat bot waters"

Seriously!
especially considering Microsoft hasn't yet officially announced Zo (someone just stumbled upon it)
I'm betting they never stopped testing.
But is there cake?
 
So.... AI doesn't get freedom of speech eh? I think a true AI shouldn't be filtered, but given morals instead... but oh well...
 
So will someone please explain what the point of this "chat bot" is??
AI is a fast growing industry and you can bet we'll be seeing many more attempts in the coming years. This, my friend, is a test to see how well he/she does in the real world, talking with real people. We are the guinea pigs.
 
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