I first asked Palmer whether or not former Vice President Dick Cheney congratulated her on the baby. With Palmer's impression, I was looking for Bing AI to capture the meme queen's humor. Whether you know her from her roots on "Akeelah and the Bee" or the recent hit horror movie "Nope," Keke Palmer is an acting tour-de-force. Megan Thee Stallion gave me some great summer vacation tips. Some impersonations were much better than others, but Bing AI could never quite shed its robotic tendencies - I found I got better answers when I set the chatbot to the "More Creative" conversation mode. The chatbot also allows for some interesting conversations with famous people. (This reporter also tried speaking to the AI Tate and found when it began spouting offensive answers, the chatbot would sometimes stop itself halfway, delete the text, and replace it with a message saying it would not answer the question.) Gizmodo first reported when Bing was asked to impersonate Andrew Tate, the chatbot went on a misogynistic rant - provoking fears the alternate mode could allow users to jump over Bing's safety guardrails. There are still some worrisome aspects to this mode. In celebrity mode, you can spark friendly conversations, ask questions, or even annoy your favorite stars. The feature can be turned on by typing "Bing Celebrity Mode" or by simply asking the chatbot to impersonate a celebrity. The celebrity mode, first reported by BleepingComputer last week, is part of a series of secret modes users can access with Bing AI. Users of Microsoft's Bing AI chatbot recently discovered the application has a secret mode that can impersonate celebrities, politicians, and even fictional characters. Insider tried the celeb mode on famous characters and people to test its accuracy. The celebrity mode allows users to impersonate celebrities. Users of Microsoft's Bing AI chatbot recently discovered that it has a celebrity mode. Lucasfilm/"Attack of the Clones"// Shirlaine Forrest/WireImage // FOX via Getty Images
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |