StaySquared ,

Sadly there's really no other search engine with a database as big as Google. We goofed by heavily relying on Google.

enleeten ,

Kagi is pretty awesome. I never directly use Google search on any of my devices anymore, been on Kagi for going on a year.

PanArab ,

Remember when Google used to give good search results?

Tekkip20 ,
@Tekkip20@lemmy.world avatar

I don't bother using things like Copilot or other AI tools like ChatGPT. I mean, they're pretty cool what they CAN give you correctly and the new demo floored me in awe.

But, I prefer just using the image generators like DALL E and Diffusion to make funny images or a new profile picture on steam.

But this example here? Good god I hope this doesn't become the norm..

qx128 ,

Are AI products released by a company liable for slander? 🤷🏻

I predict we will find out in the next few years.

micka190 ,

We had a case in Canada where Air Canada was forced to give a customer a refund after its AI told him he was eligible for one, because the judge stated that Air Canada was responsible for what their AI said.

So, maybe?

I've seen some legal experts talk about how Google basically got away from misinformation lawsuits because they weren't creating misinformation, they were giving you search results that contained misinformation, but that wasn't their fault and they were making an effort to combat those kinds of search results. They were talking about how the outcome of those lawsuits might be different if Google's AI is the one creating the misinformation, since that's on them.

trolololol ,

If you're a start up I guarantee it is

Big tech.... I'll put my chips in hell no

Dultas ,

Could this be grounds for CVS to sue Google? Seems like this could harm business if people think CVS products are less trustworthy. And Google probably can't find behind section 230 since this is content they are generating but IANAL.

CosmicTurtle0 ,

Iirc cases where the central complaint is AI, ML, or other black box technology, the company in question was never held responsible because "We don't know how it works". The AI surge we're seeing now is likely a consequence of those decisions and the crypto crash.

I'd love CVS try to push a lawsuit though.

Natanael ,

In Canada there was a company using an LLM chatbot who had to uphold a claim the bot had made to one of their customers. So there's precedence for forcing companies to take responsibility for what their LLMs says (at least if they're presenting it as trustworthy and representative)

chiliedogg ,

"We don't know how it works but released it anyway" is a perfectly good reason to be sued when you release a product that causes harm.

hydroptic ,

And this technology is what our executive overlords want to replace human workers with, just so they can raise their own compensation and pay the remaining workers even less

Hotzilla ,

I am starting to think google put this up on purpose to destroy people's opinion on AI. They are so much behind Open AI that they would benefit from it.

hydroptic ,

I doubt there's any sort of 4D chess going on, instead of the whole thing being brought about by short-sighted executives who feel like they have to do something to show that they're still in the game exactly because they're so much behind "Open"AI

The_Picard_Maneuver ,
@The_Picard_Maneuver@lemmy.world avatar

These are the subtle types of errors that are much more likely to cause problems than when it tells someone to put glue in their pizza.

RamblingPanda ,

Obviously you need hot glue for pizza, not the regular stuff.

user224 ,
@user224@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

How do you guys get these AI things? I don't have such a thing when I search using Google.

dm_me_ufo_pics ,

Gmail has something like it too with the summary bit at the top of Amazon order emails. Had one the other day that said I ordered 2 new phones, which freaked me out. It's because there were ads to phones in the order receipt email.

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