Alexa Tells Child to Play With Power Outlet
Amazon has apologized after its digital assistant Alexa told a 10-year old to connect a coin to a power socket. While there's a simple explanation, it raises even more questions.
The girl's mother said she had previously been watching YouTube videos with a variety of safe physical challenges, then used voice control to ask an Alexa-enabled device for a "challenge to do."
To the mother's shock, the device replied "The challenge is simple: plug in a phone charger about halfway into a wall outlet, then touch a penny to the exposed prongs." Fortunately, the mother heard the reply, though she says her child would have ignored the suggestion anyway. (Source: sky.com)
Penny Challenge a Dumb Idea
This wasn't an original creation by Amazon. The so-called "penny challenge" was popular among some children on video-sharing sites last year. While it's obvious this is an incredibly bad idea, it could also lead to a damaged electrical system or a house fire.
It might seem there's an obvious explanation, namely that digital assistants will often search websites (Bing in the case of Alexa) and then extract a key piece of information. It will deliver this information as a reply and, depending on the device, offer to give more detail or send a link.
The idea is to gather information from reputable sites to create an up-to-date, reliable, and relevant answer to the question.
Source Was Warning, Not Suggestion
What makes this incident particularly shocking (so to speak) is that the website from which Alexa took the wording for the response was in no way encouraging people to carry out the activity.
Instead, the extract came from a news website warning parents about the craze. The text in question, which appeared in the second paragraph, was simply an explanation of what to watch out for. (Source: ourcommunitynow.com)
That means that the technology behind Alexa completely failed to determine the context. While the text did indeed describe a challenge somebody could do, the source was the absolute opposite of saying somebody should do it, let alone being the most relevant suggestion.
Amazon has since put out a media statement saying "Customer trust is at the center of everything we do and Alexa is designed to provide accurate, relevant, and helpful information to customers. As soon as we became aware of this error, we took swift action to fix it."
17 comments:
Bad Alexa. Bad, bad Alexa. And amazon.
Mind you, some days I suspect some parents are tempted...
Sue - I couldn't believe this when I first read it.
I suspect there was a whole crew of Amazon coders working overtime to fix the problem.
I knew Alexa would snap eventually.
AI is not all that *I* ...
Kathy - And I'm sure they will put in all the time they need to make sure this doesn't happen aga....... BWAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
Deb - She made contact with Hal.
Jenny - Only as I as the dumbest programmer.
If we could only be selective about where those "challenges" appear.
Or perhaps Alexa already is...
John - Alexa knows who you are! Be alert for strange suggestions.
Quite frankly, I am surprised it took Alexa this long to screw up.
Lady - You're sadly correct.
One more reason to Never have Alexa in my home.
River - Agree!
I don't want one of those creepy assistants listening in my house all the time. But I do activate the assistance on my Google phone with questions and requests.
Cloudia - I don't even talk to google.
What is this "context" thing of which you speak?
Bill - Context? Who needs context? Whatever you think it is, that's what it is!
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