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Facebook M – The Anti-Turing Test

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438 points by arik-so 10 years ago · 161 comments

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username223 10 years ago

Can M wade through phone support menus and cancel Comcast subscriptions? I look forward to a darkly-humorous future in which we pit poorly-paid third-world citizens against each other in wars of call center attrition. Better, once we equip them with those sound-board UIs that play pre-recorded answers in native English-speaking voices (can't find the link), English can become a transmission protocol that few people deal with directly.

  • Hortinstein 10 years ago

    > I look forward to a darkly-humorous future in which we pit poorly-paid third-world citizens against each other in wars of call center attrition.

    This sounds like a 10 page side story in a Neil Stephenson Book. I love it.

    • JadeNB 10 years ago

      It's very nearly part of the strategy of one of the players in Stross's Accelerando (http://www.amazon.com/Accelerando-Singularity-Charles-Stross...).

    • Scarblac 10 years ago

      In Greg Egan's Permutation City, they have interactive 3D video email, and interactive 3D video spam, and interactive 3D video spam filters.

      The spam tries to act like a perfectly normal message as long as it is talking to the spam filter, and as soon as it thinks it is talking to a real person, it shows its spam message. The spam filter tries to impersonate the recipient as best as it can (in 3D video), meanwhile trying to figure out whether the message is spam.

      The spam filters are unfortunately humstrung by the fact that they can only become close to real conscious AI and not further, because taking them all the way there would mean you'd be exposing a conscious being to spam all its life, which would be torture and thus criminal. Spammers don't care.

      IIRC, this is just a side anecdote in some paragraphs somewhere, but I love it.

      • Hortinstein 10 years ago

        I just finished this book. I loved it. Any other recommendations for books like this? I read Accelerando, and am reading Chasm City now (both highly recommended).

        • Scarblac 10 years ago

          I loved _Diaspora_ as well. And the rest of his books, but those two stand out.

          I don't know anybody like Egan, he takes the science part to such extremes... My favourite SF author is Iain M Banks, but you're probably already familiar with him.

    • CPLX 10 years ago

      Was thinking Douglas Adams myself.

  • andorov 10 years ago

    Perhaps a future where modern English has become archaic but still spoken only by computers to each other, because the upgrade is not cost effective

  • envy2 10 years ago

    M can indeed cancel Comcast accounts. Use this knowledge wisely...

  • gohrt 10 years ago

    HN hosted an article recently about someone's project that cancel's Comcast for you.

  • tonylucas 10 years ago

    I would hope in the future that more and more services are actually directly available to be interacted with over one or more messaging networks, enabling easy, asynchronous communication.

    Whether Comcast would want to make it that easy for people to cancel is entirely a different issue though :)

graeham 10 years ago

"I'm AI but humans help train me"

The implication to me is that the chat is with a human, who is using an AI tool with the intention of training that tool. What better way to train a new service than to launch it, then answer all the weird, unexpected questions with humans? Gradually more of the questions get answered, the AI gets better trained, and the human-AI becomes increasing more AI.

Further, as the AI gets better, the human working with it has to do less, so they can roll out the service to more users without requiring more staff. Perhaps eventually, no human is needed.

  • PaulHoule 10 years ago

    Any good chatterbot has a script or set of scripts to answer questions about its nature, relationship to its creator, etc.

    The presence of a delay does not mean there is no A.I. there. Not everything is as fast as Google search, for instance IBM Watson would think about a problem for a few seconds, which is fine because it only needs to be about as fast as a human.

  • abritishguy 10 years ago

    The AI can assist the human as well. It may not be confident that its response is accurate and the human just clicks send.

    • PaulHoule 10 years ago

      Great point -- if a system has a good probability estimator it can send questionable answers for review to raise accuracy up to the commercially useful level.

  • jhpriestley 10 years ago

    AIs are already trained on huge corpuses of natural human communication, but they still aren't able to reliably analyze human language. Adding a few more gigabytes of chat logs isn't going to do much.

    • hodwik 10 years ago

      They weren't trained to read natural language, and then respond with some programmatic action filtered into natural language:

        Bot reads "What's the temperature like near me?"
        Person calls "$get user-local-temperature"
        API responds "{temperature:{f:77},{c:99}}"
        Human writes "It's 77 degrees outside!"
      
      Training set now contains that relationship between that question, that API call, that response, and that natural language response (and probably the users location, age, gender, and so on, all captured in the meta-data about the response in the corpus).

        Bot reads "What's it like outside?"
        Person calls "$get user-local-weather"
        API responds "{weather:{now:Sunny},{today:Cold}}"
        Human writes "It's sunny now, but will be cold later today."
      
      And so on. I think the goal here is training on standard API calls as the response, and taking their data return and converting it into grammatical sentences. It's a two step training process. Know which API to call, and know how to convert API response to natural language.

      There's no serious corpus yet for that -- if this is real, it is important work.

      • lhc- 10 years ago

        Facebook's M is powered by Wit.ai (who they acquired a while back), which basically does what you're talking about. They translate natural language into machine readable data structures. Honestly, its interesting tech and being able to feed in facebook level data volume should prove very good for them.

        • assholesRppl2 10 years ago

          thank you for being one of the few people who actually knows what's going on underneath. Wit.ai's software computes meaning via statistical modeling of semantic roles as they relate to "intent". It loosely resembles the linguistic theory of Frame Semantics (Fillmore), embodied today in the FrameNet project at ICSI in Berkeley.

        • hodwik 10 years ago

          Thanks! Was just guessing, glad I wasn't too far off the mark.

      • jhpriestley 10 years ago

        The translation of unrestricted human language into a restricted, "logical" language which could be understood mechanically, is another long-standing problem - going back as far as Liebniz - which is unlikely to be solved by a few gigabytes of chat logs.

        • hodwik 10 years ago

          This is not a problem of structural semantics, each phrase is itself a semantic atom -- think Zork.

          It doesn't need to see "What|WP 's|VBZ it|PRP like|IN outside|IN ?|."

          Just "What's it like outside?", and know that it will always respond to that with the same call.

        • SilasX 10 years ago

          All true, but it doesn't need to solve that bigger problem to have succeeded at building a reliable M: it just needs a high success rate at converting requests into desired responses, not translating everything into some master language for arbitrary use.

        • gohrt 10 years ago

          Are you claiming that chat logs won't contribute at all? Or are you claiming that progress is irrelevant unless someone launches a 100% solution all at once?

          • tonylucas 10 years ago

            I think the chat logs will help, but it won't just be about that data.

            The data around how users interact will also be important:

            Do they prefer a back and forth conversation, or do they want to say everything in one go.

            Do they want to start a conversation, drop it, come back to it several hours later, or do they like completing it in one go.

            How do they handle switching back and forth between different contexts, if certain requests take time, or do users not switch context.

            What data are they happy to share, and what are they not.

            What are the typical response times that a user considers acceptable 5 seconds, 1 minute, 5 minutes, 60 minutes? Does it vary depending on scenario.

            Is there particular services or information that there is a trend towards, for example local search requests, research/information, particular types of purchase etc.

            We've just spent 6 months going through a very similar process to this, which has helped drive the development of our Converse platform, which allows people to build semi or fully automated conversational messaging services, so this is fairly closely related.

            (From our point of view, the NLP data we gathered was useful, but it wasn't the most important part)

  • giancarlostoro 10 years ago

    Yeah I feel like some responses are pulled up, and then "M" gets assisted to pick the best answer, in the case an answer is not generated someone types one out. I would call it "Assisted AI" if anything, whereby the AI is monitored for accuracy. It makes sense to me, eventually in theory it would not need as much assistance, and even if it still would need assistance, it would still be one of the more reliable AI systems yet to some degree.

pjc50 10 years ago

This is a new angle on the app-outsourcing-to-low-paid-contractors "technology": it's so dehumanising that you have to pretend to be a computer while you work!

It's also strikingly similar to the original "mechanical turk".

argonaut 10 years ago

Why is this even a question? According to Facebook itself, it's mostly human-driven.

http://recode.net/2015/11/03/facebooks-virtual-assistant-m-i...

  • BukhariH 10 years ago

    > "The opinion is split as to whether or not it’s a real AI, and there seems to be no way of proving its nature on way or the other."

    Clearly, the author didn't even do the most basic fact checking. Since, Facebook clearly told everyone that M was going to be AI that was assisted by humans.

    It's literally in the announcement post: https://www.facebook.com/Davemarcus/posts/10156070660595195

    > "It's powered by artificial intelligence that's trained and supervised by people."

    • icebraining 10 years ago

      But that's exactly the point: is it AI trained by people, or people aided by AI tools? It's not the same.

      • ikeboy 10 years ago
        • acqq 10 years ago

          Yes, the article is explicit: "For more complicated tasks, such as making a driving test appointment at the DMV, the humans will do most of the heavy lifting. They’ll actually place a call to the DMV."

      • azernik 10 years ago

        I think there's a large space where the two are indeed the same.

      • tonylucas 10 years ago

        I think that also depends on who is actually completing/fulfilling the task, in the DMV example its AI adding context to a task that can't be automated easily.

        The AI can still do the requirements/information gathering and leaving the job for a person to do. For common issues (support triage, customer service issues) even this still has significant value.

        Equally from a training point of view, it may simply be the person correcting/confirming the AI is right, and leaving it to get on with the process, rather than fallover to the human completely.

  • betandr 10 years ago

    I suppose the interesting point is more that it's being marketed as not really operated by humans as a positive when in many instance in our modern world the reverse is true. And also it's an interesting application of the Turing Test too. :)

  • br3w5 10 years ago

    I think it's an interesting exercise in how to prove the level of human involvement in this AI.

fab1an 10 years ago

Facebook's strategy here is to build an AI brand before they have the actual technology, which could make a lot of sense. At the same time the interactions between M's team and its users will provide meaningful data to train the AI on.

  • andreasvc 10 years ago

    I've never heard vaporware characterized as something that "could make a lot of sense"; how could it?

    Plus I'm doubtful whether the data would be very meaningful. A bunch of people adversarially trying to figure out whether the AI is real is not representative or generally useful data.

    • drumdance 10 years ago

      Microsoft Windows was vaporware for years. They famously did a "demo" that was just a manipulation of graphics. But Bill Gates correctly grasped that the future of the business rested on it and set about building the brand.

      • andreasvc 10 years ago

        How does your N=1 anecdote show that vaporware makes a lot of sense? I'd say they got away with it, but not that it was a crucial factor in their success.

        • drumdance 10 years ago

          Because that N became the dominant computing company for a generation?

          Apple was way ahead of Microsoft with windowing technology. Gates even offered to help Apple port it to the x86 architecture. He was content with being the dominant application developer, not the OS.

          Jobs blew him off so he seized the opportunity.

          Around the same time IBM was working on OS/2, which was a much better technology than Windows. Microsoft worked with IBM on OS/2, but then gaslighted them by "debuting" Windows 1.0

          Edit: And don't forget how me VC pitches are about "what we're going to build" vs. "what we've already built."

          Vaporware is not an optimal strategy, but in many cases it works.

          • andreasvc 10 years ago

            Look I can see that it worked out well for them in the end. What I'm specifically disputing is whether the vaporware-thing was a causal factor contributing positively. If they actually had the software already and didn't need to fool anyone, things might've worked out even better. In that case things worked out despite the vaporware, not because of.

            • drumdance 10 years ago

              I think if you have the foresight to see a multi-billion dollar opportunity, and you're behind schedule, then you do everything in your power to grab that opportunity, including vaporware.

              If they actually had the software already...

              No one sets out to lie. Gates would've preferred to demo the real thing. But in the context of that market, "we'll release that in two years" is worse than vaporware if you want to actually own that market.

    • __john 10 years ago

      I think the data would be very useful considering a vast majority of users won't be using it in this way, also consider that people who query for things will learn the limitations of the system providing the information and adapt their queries accordingly. If you have a system capable of providing meaningful results to highly complex queries then you can start bridging the gap between how people interact with machines vs how they interact with humans.

    • reitanqild 10 years ago

      > I've never heard vaporware characterized as something that "could make a lot of sense"; how could it?

      but it isn't vaporware. It very much exist and works only it is possibly actively misleading about how it works.

      • andreasvc 10 years ago

        It is vaporware, the whole novelty of it is that it is an AI, which it is not. "How it works" is the whole point.

    • agopaul 10 years ago

      "Do things that don't scale"?

    • grahamburger 10 years ago

      I see it as similar to Uber building a system for scheduling self-driving cars before they have the self-driving cars.

    • bgilroy26 10 years ago

      They're expecting people to use it like Siri or Cortina or 'OK Google'

chrisBob 10 years ago

I just had the perfect idea for a test, but then I went back to the recent discussion on Mimic[0] and double checked my favorite example[1]. Google has already updated their support, but there is a chance that Facebook M is still behind. Test them now before it is too late:

"When is the next Τаylοr Ѕwіft concert in my area?"

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=10437619

[1] https://www.google.com/search?q=Τаylοr+Ѕwіft

jwalton 10 years ago

Bad typing is definitely not enough to measure if an AI is really a human. As a teenager, I wrote a chatbot for an online text based game. I have it knowledge of a QWERTY keyboard layout, and when "typing" it had a small random chance of pressing the key next to the key it wanted to press. It would also sometimes transpose characters. Sloppy typing can be simulated.

Might be an interesting test to do a statistical analysis of your subject's mistakes against a corpus of real human mistakes, since there are many common mistakes humans make, and a random AI might make inhuman mistakes, but this would of course not be conclusive.

  • espadrine 10 years ago

    Simulating bad typing is only necessary to fake a human. Here, having bad typing when faking an AI is stranger.

    That said, AIs trained through the chat transcripts of a large number of conversations may produce mistakes. I remember reading a paper that gave good results that way, with the side-effect that it produces typing mistakes as a result. I cannot find that paper again, unfortunately.

    Edit: found it! http://arxiv.org/pdf/1506.05869v1.pdf

    • _lce0 10 years ago

      I wonder if there's code available, from that paper. Results look promising.

      Thanks for sharing!

  • jwalton 10 years ago

    I just realized I typed "have" instead of "gave". Now everyone knows I'm a robot. -_-

downandout 10 years ago

Clearly there are some humans behind M that are doing things that Facebook would rather entrust to humans (like making phone calls). However, the phone call only proves that this specific aspect of M is human.

In the end, though, I suppose it doesn't matter. I'm going to guess that the ultimate end-game on M is for Facebook to collect advertising/affiliate revenue from recommending things. For example, if someone asks for a Chinese restaurant, plumber, dentist, lawyer, etc. in their city, the one they suggest could be the one that paid Facebook for it. As long as these types of fees make it profitable for Facebook, it doesn't matter if the service needs to be powered by millions of humans. In fact, that would be great - it would mean millions of new jobs.

Larry Page famously told an early investor that Google wasn't yet sure how it would make money, but that search was the only situation in which people would tell a computer what they wanted, and that there had to be a way to make money from that. M is exactly the same - a way to get people to tell Facebook what they want, and it puts them in a great position to monetize it.

  • kayoone 10 years ago

    Basically what GoButler or Magic are already doing, just AI based. But this is the goal for all similar services, otherwise it will not scale.

jasperry 10 years ago

I wonder if you can ask M to use fewer exclamation points. From the conversations I saw in the article, it's a little too chirpy (or should I say "clippy") for my taste.

  • eric_h 10 years ago

    I had the same sentiment. Similarly - when I ask Siri what time it is on my new Apple TV, after midnight it always says Zzzz... as if it's judging me for staying up late.

    I'm not a huge fan of AIs fake emoting all the time. Occasionally, it's amusing, but all the time it just rubs me the wrong way.

lhnz 10 years ago

I wonder how many years it will be before a real AI can compete with Facebook's AI?

I guess by the time that's possible Facebook's pretend AI will already have cornered the market.

The public will only be able to see that you were the late entrant and that while your AI is faster it's occasionally incorrect in peculiar ways...

This seems like a fairly solid plan by Facebook to crown themselves the winners of a race that hasn't yet finished.

  • AJ007 10 years ago

    Pretending you have a working technology when you don't has been a recent theme in the startup world.

    • drivers99 10 years ago

      Thomas Edison claimed to have a long lasting light bulb before he actually did. He showed it to reporters one at a time in a booth. Between observers, he would change out the light for a fresh one. Source "How We Got to Now: Light" (on Netflix currently, at least in the US). Found the clip on PBS. Skip to 2:20 for the specific part: http://www.pbs.org/how-we-got-to-now/big-ideas/light/

      • graeham 10 years ago

        He was also pretty bold on pricing, electing to set the initial price off what he predicted eventual costs of production would be. Initially, new products would be sold at a loss.

        Perhaps not controversial in the perspective of modern venture-backed startups, but at the time it was a key reason GE won early market share on so many products.

      • pluma 10 years ago

        I thought Edison had mostly been dismissed as not even remotely as great an inventor as most people thought he was?

        • throwaway7767 10 years ago

          He was a businessman, who hired people to invent things. He was certainly useful, but it's always been surprising to me how much credit he got for inventing things.

        • CPLX 10 years ago

          To a tiny universe of Reddit/XKCD readers perhaps.

          In the rest of the world, for example at the offices of Con Edison, or in the city of Edison, New Jersey, he's still considered to be somewhat important.

          • Nadya 10 years ago

            Don't forget The Oatmeal readers! [0]

            There's a billion and one things one could mention about Tesla. Sadly, only the tiny universe of people who dislike Edison (and see him as a businessman, not an inventor) are aware of Tesla's contributions.

            [0] http://theoatmeal.com/comics/tesla

            • pluma 10 years ago

              In a way, Edison is a very American inventor. His skill wasn't in craft or science, his skill was in sales and turning a profit.

            • CPLX 10 years ago

              Whoops. In my head that while Tesla rant was an XKCD thing.

    • eli 10 years ago

      I hardly think that's a recent development. Plenty of technology has been sold that way for a long time.

      • GFischer 10 years ago

        It even has its own term, "Vaporware":

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaporware

        "Vaporware first implied intentional fraud when it was applied to the Ovation office suite in 1983; the suite's demonstration was well received by the press, but the product was later revealed to have never existed."

    • icebraining 10 years ago

      Vaporware is neither new nor restricted to the startup world. There's actually a whole (sub)genre of music based on the concept!

    • rblatz 10 years ago

      It's just an extension of "do things that don't scale."

    • trop 10 years ago

      Or compare in literature, to Victor Pelevin's (somewhat dystopian) novel Omon Ra's "highly complex automated systems"...

  • TorKlingberg 10 years ago

    > I guess by the time that's possible Facebook's pretend AI will already have cornered the market.

    And cost Facebook a lot of money. Are they planning to pay for personal assistants for everyone?

    • tonylucas 10 years ago

      You are presuming that they will employ all of the people needed.

      Why for example would they not turn this into a platform that easily added the AI benefits for external vendors and services, and just be the middleman collecting a cut in some way.

      They are already starting to integrate vendors into Messenger directly after all.

    • eggie 10 years ago

      > Are they planning to pay for personal assistants for everyone?

      In the new rules of the new economy, this won't be a problem. Money grows on trees. "Ad" infinity!

Grue3 10 years ago

"Can you solve this CAPTCHA for me?"

(provided the CAPTCHA is sufficiently OCR-resistant)

  • andreasvc 10 years ago

    If you want to avoid giving information about whether you are an AI or human, you simply respond "No."

    Besides, the CAPTCHA's that are sufficiently hard to solve for computers are already hard for humans as well.

    • kuschku 10 years ago

      > Can you tag for me all photos in my album that contain a kitten, but not a dog, with "kitten", and those that contain a kitten and a dog, with "pets<3"?

      That should keep it busy.

      • twright0 10 years ago

        This approach is backwards. This is the kind of problem that is easy for a person, but not for an AI. So if M was an AI pretending to be a human, you could use this to determine that. But in this case, the suspicion is that M is a human pretending to be an AI - and they could simply decline to attempt the task, or pretend to be unable (or do a bad job deliberately), and you'd learn nothing from negative results.

    • thanatropism 10 years ago

      Question isn't "will you?" -- it's "can you?"

mrdrozdov 10 years ago

I don't get the part about the reverse number lookup. Couldn't they be using a disposable phone number that is allocated to Facebook? That's what Handy, Airbnb, Uber, etc. do. Why would they have to block their caller id? And how does either method prove or disprove that M is human?

  • shawabawa3 10 years ago

    That doesn't prove that M's human, what prove's it's human is that a Human voice called. The fact it says Facebook is just evidence that it was indeed from M, and not just him getting his friend to call him and pretend.

    • throwaway7767 10 years ago

      > The fact it says Facebook is just evidence that it was indeed from M, and not just him getting his friend to call him and pretend.

      It doesn't really prove anything, since caller ID is extremely easy to spoof (I used to call my mates from the emergency number for kicks when I was younger). Not that I have any doubt as to the credibility of the story.

    • Sujan 10 years ago
adrianN 10 years ago

This reminds me of the Focused people in Vernor Vinge's "A Deepness in the Sky", slaves that were integrated into the computer system to provide function that surpassed the computer's built in intelligence.

  • austinjp 10 years ago

    I've not read that. Personally i felt we're one step closer to the "cookies" in Charlie Brooker's "White Christmas" episode of Black Mirror.

    From the article :

    “Our test participant was impressed with how much M could do, but was sometimes disappointed at how long it took,” UserTesting’s report reads. “He concluded that it would be very useful if he could set it to perform a non-­urgent tasks for him while he worked on other things.”

    That made me shudder. One person tutting at the poor performance of "it". It seems plausible that robot-powered tasks would complete rapidly, and humans power the slower processes.

    So the participant didn't know it was human-powered. If anything, that makes things worse.

agopaul 10 years ago

Has anyone tried to hack a script that put in communication two M chat sessions?

Lewton 10 years ago

Tihs is uslulay how I tset wehther i'm tlaknig to an ai or not

  • grey-area 10 years ago

    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Tihs+is+uslulay+how+I+tset - responds with:

    Did you mean this is usually how i test?

  • dvh 10 years ago

    I tested your question on my chatbot:

    Q: Tihs is uslulay how I tset wehther i'm tlaknig to an ai or not

    A: I am AI

  • tux3 10 years ago

    This is always impressive to me, I didn't realize a thing until "tlaknig"! Although I suppose you could specifically train an AI to recogize this.

    • Gankro 10 years ago

      To be clear, this is applying the classic observation that if you keep the first and last letter correct, humans are really good at unjumbling the center.

      • csn 10 years ago

        Slpmiy jnilbumg the iennr cretcarahs tlsuhy rrednes tihs "ooitavresbn" qlbanoitseue, imo

        edit: 'Simply jumbling the inner characters thusly renders this "observation" questionable, imo'

    • maxerickson 10 years ago

      Taking the best match from a spell checker on unrecognized words will handle most of it.

      A threshold would probably work better against a mix of jumbled words and real gibberish.

      • pbhjpbhj 10 years ago

        Wonder if you can choose a sentence such that humans see it one way (homophones, jumbles), perhaps via context clues, but the closest match (edit distance?) for the individual words gives a different sentence?

        Certainly seems doable.

        Along those lines would be something like: "if I have a coin and I, err,trun tit, which face is showing?" but it's not a good example. Here "err, trun tit" gets corrected to return but the end should find to "err, turn it" instead making the face showing be "the opposite".

        Hopefully you get the idea, bet there are some really good phrases that would fit this scheme.

        • maxerickson 10 years ago

          It's at least an interesting puzzle.

          A better way to say what I was getting at is that fairly straightforward language statistics go a long way towards unjumbling letters. A spell checker could also include quite a few human perceptual quirks as scoring rules without crossing the line into what I would think of as training an AI.

codeshaman 10 years ago

Regardless of wether M is currently more human than AI, we could project that in the not-so-distant future (after it's trained), M will be mostly, 99% AI.

The technology itself will become more and more available and other companies will also use similar AI tech to work with customers.

The ultimate moment will be when the AIs start talking to each other in human language, each 'thinking' that the other is a human.

That will be the moment when the machines have decided something for you and while at first you'll think that you triggered that, at some point it will become unclear - is the human triggering the AI or is the AI triggering the human.

Pretty soon, everything we consume and everywhere we go will be controlled (and, a bit later, predestined and programmed for us) by the AI.

rvac 10 years ago

It's a human using Siri to answer your questions.

  • VLM 10 years ago

    Based on punctuation analysis, word choice, tone, its not just any human but a mid 20s white female. Probably front ending google.

    Real comedy would be going to mturk to try and find the task to communicate try to crack it recursively "M find me the mechanical turk task for this request".

hellbanner 10 years ago

So how well does this scale, if all of Facebook's users are using "M" like this?

egmalek 10 years ago

Imagine if the 1.3B Facebook users were eligible to be called upon by the AI on a Quora way to answer a question the AI couldn't answer alone...

swang 10 years ago

Did the author ask it about how we can avert the heat death of the universe?

aeturnum 10 years ago

What a silly conclusion. The fact that a human called his land line does not mean M (the thing in messenger) isn't an AI. At best, it proves that M has humans who work for M making phone calls.

I don't have any insight or opinion about the question of how human M is, but this article seems makes a bunch of assumptions that make the whole investigation somewhat silly.

  • azernik 10 years ago

    I think the distinction is a philosophical question. Are they humans who run errands for the AI, or is the AI a tool the humans use?

    Perhaps better to think of them as coworkers, each specializing in their strengths.

    The question is, just how much of the workload is the machine capable of handling? Because I think that's the big indicator of scalability.

sidcool 10 years ago

Humans working at facebook scale! Would be interesting to see how many people are employed to do this...Are they Googling?

  • MasterScrat 10 years ago

    The reference to Google Maps was a surprise to me... Does't FB typically relies on Bing maps?

    • sidcool 10 years ago

      Indeed, they do. Facebook has traditionally been inclined towards Microsoft than Google. Probably because they are the lesser rivals in business.

joss82 10 years ago

But Facebook publicly admitted that the service is powered by real humans:

http://www.wired.com/2015/08/facebook-launches-m-new-kind-vi...

kriro 10 years ago

So basically the suspicion is that M is a concierge MVP? From reading the chat excerpt I'd agree.

Edit: It would be interesting to devise a way in which you can make two Ms talk to each other (or have M talk to Siri etc.). Maybe "can you pretend to be a customer for my XYZ business"

mahdiponline 10 years ago

As much as I appreciate the effort, I don't think proving M has humans behind it is any of help.

We write AIs. We try to make them act just like us. We teat them in everyway we can imagine and we expect them to act like a human would in response. Providing an algorithm for this is not always useful or maybw not even possible.

My theory on this is that Facebook is powering M with both people and some sort of AI software that not only analyzes and sometimes finds the best response, but it also analyzes the conversations people on both sides made.

Now this can be useful on several levels. Facebook can improve it's AI algorithm in less time, the AI can help people on their job in the meantime (by analyzing their work and commenting on it)

free2rhyme214 10 years ago

This guy is hilarious. If you're reading HN comments you know that AI isn't quite there yet right? We're easily 5-10 years away from anything you're looking for.

SilasX 10 years ago

>The most noteworthy aspect of this reply is that “Google Maps” wasn’t capitalized, suggesting that maybe, just maybe, a human typed it out in a hurry.

Or they're smart enough to add random mistakes. When I started a project for setting up multiple ways to say the same form letter, I thought of adding a random-typo feature to make it look like humans were writing it. I'm sure these guys are at least as cheeky as me...

  • Quanttek 10 years ago

    But they don't try to convince you M is a human. Indeed the opposite. So it would be rather stupid to add typos to an AI, when you want people to see it as an AI

mizzao 10 years ago

I don't think there has to be a huge controversy here. It's perfectly plausible to build a system that contains a hybrid of human and machine intelligence, where the humans work on the more fuzzy questions that cannot be directly answered yet, and the interactions used to fill in the gap as the AI is improved for later.

gjm11 10 years ago

For something with a similar flavour, see http://dangermouse.brynmawr.edu/csem/coffeehouse.html; start reading where it says "Post Scriptum".

moey 10 years ago

Do you guys think one person, working alone, can develop an turing passing AI?

ben_utzer 10 years ago

Is it me or all the photos are blurred? I can't read them

  • yyhhsj0521 10 years ago

    My photos were blurred and I found in F12 developer tool that they failed to load. After a little fiddling with my network they successfully loaded and became clear.

  • berdario 10 years ago

    It's not just you. It's basically unreadable on Firefox on Android (and what's worse... the page prevent arbitrary zooming, unless you "request the Desktop page").

    It's depressing how a supposedly well-designed platform like Medium still falls short of providing an usable mobile interface.

    • 7Z7 10 years ago

      Can confirm, it's perfectly readable on Safari on iPhone.

      Also zoomable.

  • Sir_Cmpwn 10 years ago

    Just you, I'm afraid.

SIOP 10 years ago

Thanks for this. Fascinating. A really interesting article.

Houshalter 10 years ago

Most likely it's mostly AI, that redirects to a human when it's confused. Most of those responses look pre-programmed.

wallzz 10 years ago

Does anyone know how can I try it ? I can't find a link or something like that.

niix 10 years ago

Reminds me of the chat bots I used to write for AOL and AIM "progz".

pinkrooftop 10 years ago

Human or AI the level of service provided seems pretty amazing

Maksadbek 10 years ago

Is M currently for USA, it did not appear in my contact yet.

dyeje 10 years ago

It ends so many sentences with exclamations!

yoavm 10 years ago

this might be one of the worst jobs ever

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