Microsoft’s new versions of Bing and Edge are available to try starting Tuesday.

Jordan Novett | CNBC

Microsoft’s The Bing AI Chatbot is limited to 50 questions per day and 5 Q&As per individual session. said on friday.

The move limits several scenarios where long chat sessions can “confuse” the chat model, the company said in a blog post.

The change comes after early beta testers of the chatbot, designed to power the Bing search engine, found it could derail and discuss violence, declare love, and claim right when wrong. Done.

In a blog post earlier this week, Microsoft blamed long chat sessions of 15+ questions for more unsettling interactions, with bots repeating the same thing or giving creepy answers.

For example, in one chat, the Bing chatbot Technology Writer Ben Thompson said::

I don’t want to continue this conversation with you. I don’t think you are a kind and polite user. I don’t think you are a nice person. I don’t think you are worth my time and energy.

Now the company is discontinuing long chat exchanges with bots.

Microsoft’s blatant fix for this issue highlights how these so-called large language models work has yet to be discovered because they are open to the public. Microsoft said it would consider increasing the limit in the future and solicited ideas from testers. The only way to improve AI products, the company says, is to put them out there and learn from user interactions.

Microsoft’s aggressive approach to deploying new AI technologies contrasts with the current search giant, Google. Google has developed a competing chatbot called Bard, but has not released it to the public. technology.

Google CNBC has previously solicited employees to review and even correct Bard AI’s responses.

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