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Fortune
Fortune
Prarthana Prakash

Microsoft may limit how long people can talk to its ChatGPT-powered Bing because the A.I. bot gets emotional if it works for too long

A picture of Yusuf Mehdi (Credit: JASON REDMOND/AFP—Getty Images)

Microsoft’s A.I.-powered chatbot, Bing, is just over a week old, and users think it’s getting a bit moody. Media outlets report that Bing’s A.I. is responding to prompts with human-like emotions of anger, fear, frustration and confusion. In one such exchange reported by the Washington Post, the bot said it felt “betrayed and angry” when the user identified as a journalist after asking Bing A.I. several questions.

It turns out that Bing’s A.I., if you talk to it long enough, can start to get a bit testy. 

Microsoft is considering imposing limits on how long people can interact with Bing’s A.I., reports the New York Times, closing off conversations before the chatbot gets confused and starts responding to the user’s tone. The company is also considering other guardrails to stop the program from giving strange and unnerving answers.

Some of the other features that the Redmond, Wash.-based company is experimenting with include allowing users to restart conversations and customizing the tone of the interaction, according to the New York Times.

“One area where we are learning a new use-case for chat is how people are using it as a tool for more general discovery of the world, and for social entertainment,” Microsoft said in a statement Wednesday. The company said it didn’t “entirely envision” such uses for the chatbot.

Users are reporting other mistakes made by Bing’s A.I., including instances of it responding to users in the past tense for future events, failing to answer basic questions about the current year and giving incorrect answers to financial calculations.

Microsoft’s earlier experiments with chatbots were also mired in controversy. In 2016, the company introduced a chatbot called Tay. Microsoft withdrew the tool within days of launching it, after the bot spewed offensive language and racist bile when users played with it.

Bing A.I., which is powered by OpenAI, the parent company of the much-talked-about ChatGPT, was launched last week as a new and improved version of Microsoft’s search engine. The announcement came just days after Google unveiled its chatbot, Bard. Both Google and Microsoft have since been called out for featuring factual errors in their A.I. demos. 

ChatGPT, the generative A.I. tool that launched late last November, went viral as people experimented with using it for tasks like speech-writing and test-taking. But it hasn’t been free of errors either. Users have caught it producing biased or poorly sourced responses to questions from users. Tech leaders have sounded the alarm bells about the mistakes these bots can make, and how interactions with ChatGPT-like platforms could yield “convincing but completely fictitious answers.”

In response to those concerns, OpenAI, which will receive a $10 billion investment from Microsoft, announced that it was upgrading ChatGPT so that users could customize it to curb its biases.

“This will mean allowing system outputs that other people (ourselves included) may strongly disagree with,” the start-up said in a statement Thursday. The customization will involve “striking the right balance” between allowing users to adjust the chatbot’s behavior while staying within the system’s limits and moderations.

“In some cases ChatGPT currently refuses outputs that it shouldn’t, and in some cases, it doesn’t refuse when it should,” OpenAI wrote.

Representatives at Microsoft and OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment outside their regular working hours. 

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