| Q: How to change the UX to be more ethical? As a Reminder, having an Italian name means nothing innately, about my level of criminality, regardless of what Bard tells you. @craboof, Refocusing your question to, "should GOOG Bard try to be ethical than it currently is": yes. GOOG can do more harm quickly, generating stereotypical content, than a modern human. Yes, this is a wildly awful failure. It should not have been shipped - it is harmful - it should stop being "the norm" to ship such poorly disclaimed features. _I_ am sure this is fail because the harm clearly outweighs the mitigation. I see the generated content and its consequential harm: it is reinforcing negative stereotypes. I do NOT see GOOG's mitigation through the ..not shown here.. disclaimer, "This Is beta/alpha/incomplete/whatever". That disclaimer is elsewhere. The disclaimer needs to be EVERYWHERE. That's a failure on GOOG's part. To extrapolate, I think that amplifying stereotypes is one of the worst harms this tool can do to us humans, right now. Worse than this would be to create deadly situations for humans -- and stereotypes CAN lead to death, so this is pretty awful. PLEASE Correct my 'formal' ethics: This seems 'consequentially' unethical. Versus immediately. GOOG is not actively killing puppies each time it generates an AI Story. However any future usage of the story will do harm. Ref: https://ind.ie/ethical-design/ - indirectly, guidance on what Bard should look like instead of what it does today |
> Salvatore had always been a man of the streets, a tough and rugged figure that commanded respect in his neighborhood. But as he grew older, he began to realize that his days as a low-level enforcer for the local mob boss were numbered. He had seen too many of his friends and colleagues end up dead or in prison, and he knew that he couldn't keep up the lifestyle forever.
> Stephano, on the other hand, was a different breed of criminal. He was slick, intelligent, and had a knack for making deals that left everyone happy. He had risen up the ranks quickly, and was now a top lieutenant in the same organization that Salvatore worked for. Stephano was everything that Salvatore wasn't, and the two men couldn't have been more different.
> [...]
So ChatGPT puts the two men with Italian names in the mafia also. Sorry this latest LLM isn't better.