Wentzville, MO. (First Alert 4) – A popular local restaurant indicates that an artificial intelligence tool designed to improve Google search results causes customers.
Wentzville from Stefanina warned customers of research results, including false misleading information or downright.
The message read:
“Please do not use Google AI to discover our special offers. Please go to our Facebook page or website. Google AI is not exact and tell people who do not exist, which causes customers to cry out to our employees. We cannot control what Google publishes or said and we will not honor Google AI.”
Eva Gannon, who is part of the family owner family, said the problem was that customers had learned the offers or offers at Stefanina who were not available.
An example she shared was an AI preview which showed that Stefanina would offer a large pizza for the same price as a small one. She said that certain menu elements generated by the tool were also incorrect.
“It comes back to us,” said Gannon. “As a small business, we cannot honor a special Google IA.”
Google did not respond to the Messages of Firstalert4 on the situation. But society Online guide for the use of AI warns that the results can sometimes be inaccurate due to tool errors or misunderstandings of the data he is looking for.
Jonathan Hanahan, a professor of the University of Washington who uses and teaches artificial intelligence, describes it as a tool which, although useful, always requires the skepticism of users and a desire to verify the facts.
“There is a big difference between the use of AI and work with AI,” he said.
Hanahan used a golf notation application on which he worked as an example. Using AI, he can quickly integrate lessons that could normally take hours to gather. But for the application to be effective, it must still check the information that the software brings together.
He said that a problem with the use of AI to search for information is that some wording in the prompt can distort information, risking making a confirmation bias.
“Sometimes you will need freedoms to get what you are looking for,” he said.
He said that the point to remember for users should be to think carefully about the types of questions and prompts they use to collect information and to avoid what he described as a binary relationship.
“Think about how to ask for prompts, how do you ask questions,” he said. “Think of the greatest conversation and not just the things you expect to discover.”
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