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Ask Jamie chatbot taken down from MOH site after gaffes

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Ask Jamie chatbot taken down from MOH site after gaffes​


Ask Jamie chatbot taken down from MOH site after gaffes


A gaffe by virtual assistant Ask Jamie on the MOH's website, linking Covid-19 and contraception, was uncovered by netizens. PHOTO: ST READER

Users bemused after it dished out family planning advice when asked about Covid-19 matters​

DOMINIC LOW
Oct 05, 2021 06:00 am


Gaffes by a chatbot on the Ministry of Health's (MOH) website left some Internet users bemused - and many tickled - at the weekend after it dished out family planning advice when asked about Covid-19 matters.

Screenshots of the Ask Jamie chatbot's mistake have been shared online, such as on discussion board Reddit, and have drawn mostly amused responses from netizens.

When the chatbot was asked "My daughter is tested (sic) Covid-19 positive what should I do?", it replied: "You should practise safe sex through the correct and consistent use of condoms, or abstinence, for at least the whole duration of your female partner's pregnancy." Other variations include using "son" instead of "daughter" in the question.

But the chatbot would provide the appropriate advice - to remain calm and stay at the person's place of accommodation - if the question was phrased differently.
As at yesterday, Ask Jamie had been taken down from MOH's website.

Developed by the Government Technology Agency, the Ask Jamie virtual assistant uses natural language processing technology to "understand" a question and pull up the most relevant answer from a government agency's website or database.

A chatbot must be "trained" to learn human speech and understand different ways a question may be posed.

This can be tedious, particularly if done manually by human staff reviewing thousands of questions and responses, said Mr Jude Tan, chief commercial officer of artificial intelligence firm INTNT.ai.

"You have questions which are semantically alike, but pointing to two different answers," he added, referring to Ask Jamie's mistake.

MISINTERPRETED​

Some netizens have tried to explain the gaffe, stating that the chatbot had detected certain words in the question and misinterpreted it as one about sexually transmitted diseases.

Wrong answers - termed "false positives" - can happen in about a third of an untrained chatbot's responses, Mr Tan said.

As a chatbot becomes more complex and its database of responses grows, the likelihood of it giving a wrong response also increases.

A chatbot that cannot provide the correct answers within two or three questions from users reflects badly on a company, Mr Tan said.

"I know a couple of companies who had launched their bots and... shut them down two or three years later because of the negativity surrounding the bots, (which) affected their branding."

The Ask Jamie chatbot has been implemented on more than 70 government agency websites.

It is customised to answer questions about its host agencies' services and other relevant topics, but has also been upgraded to display answers from the most relevant agency.
While it has been taken down on the MOH website, a check by The Straits Times showed that the chatbot is still present on others.
ST has contacted MOH for comment.
 
Practising safe sex during a pandemic is good advice. People tend to fark a lot more when they are restricted from going out... :roflmao:
 
hxxps://www.tech.gov.sg/products-and-services/ask-jamie/

What is Ask Jamie?
Conceptualised in 2014, ‘Ask Jamie’ is a virtual assistant (VA) that can be implemented on agency websites and trained to be able to answer queries within specific domains. To date, Ask Jamie has been implemented across 70 government agency websites. The VA technology helps to provide direct responses to citizens who prefer to search for information online, and in turn, manpower can be re-directed to handle more complex queries and issues.
Ask Jamie taps on its Natural Language Processing (NLP) engine to understand the questions posed by the public and responds with an appropriate answer. When an answer entails multiple permutations, Ask Jamie can be trained to ask follow-on questions to refine the answer to one relevant to the user’s query.


Benefits
The WOG ‘Ask Jamie’ Virtual Assistant will bring about the following benefits:
Greater convenience and accessibility to the government, 24/7;
Quick and direct answers to queries;
Availability of self-help and reduced need for call centres;
Ability to get help without the need to know which agencies to go to; and
Better user experience through conversational digital interactions

---

Get to know the GovTech team behind Ask Jamie, the government chatbot

hxxps://www.tech.gov.sg/media/technews/govtech-team-behind-ask-jamie-government-chatbot

vSkDj7r.jpg



Jamie, the expert on safe sex:

Qkh5LBn.jpg
 
KNN these so called artificial intelligence coming from a Singapore stat board is a disgrace. So many software engineers working on this damn old AI chatbot and still show up such an obvious howler!

https://www.tech.gov.sg/products-and-services/ask-jamie/

The Government Technology Agency of Singapore (GovTech) and Smart Nation and Digital Government Office (SNDGO) have been exploring the use of virtual assistants (VA) and artificial intelligence (AI) technology to help citizens and businesses navigate online government services and improve service delivery.

What is Ask Jamie?

Conceptualised in 2014, ‘Ask Jamie’ is a virtual assistant (VA) that can be implemented on agency websites and trained to be able to answer queries within specific domains. To date, Ask Jamie has been implemented across 70 government agency websites. The VA technology helps to provide direct responses to citizens who prefer to search for information online, and in turn, manpower can be re-directed to handle more complex queries and issues.

Ask Jamie taps on its Natural Language Processing (NLP) engine to understand the questions posed by the public and responds with an appropriate answer. When an answer entails multiple permutations, Ask Jamie can be trained to ask follow-on questions to refine the answer to one relevant to the user’s query.

Benefits

The WOG ‘Ask Jamie’ Virtual Assistant will bring about the following benefits:

  • Greater convenience and accessibility to the government, 24/7;
  • Quick and direct answers to queries;
  • Availability of self-help and reduced need for call centres;
  • Ability to get help without the need to know which agencies to go to; and
  • Better user experience through conversational digital interactions

What are some of the new developments?

Ask Jamie is now available across agencies
With the ‘No Wrong Door’ approach, Ask Jamie pulls information from the relevant government agency and displays the answer where the query is posed. For example, a citizen may ask about Primary 1 registration on the SLA website, and Ask Jamie will be able to retrieve and offer an answer from MOE’s VA in the same SLA chat window.

Ask Jamie is now Multi-channel
Ask Jamie’s citizen outreach channels have been extended with the use of AI and VA technology in many new areas to improve efficiency. For example, citizens can now perform hands-free voice transactions without using buttons or dials.
• Ask Jamie Email - Using VA for email
• Ask Jamie Voice - Using VA on call centres to automate call answering such as Ministry of Social and Family Development’s baby bonus hotline and MOE’s secondary school posting hotline
• Ask Jamie Live Chat - Integration with voice to speak with call agent
• Ask Jamie Bot - Using VA on Facebook Messenger (to be launched on social media soon)

What are the future plans?

Automation of call centres to address general queries can relieve resources for and reduce costs of call centre operations. Call agents can be relieved from tending to routine queries to focus on more complex questions. A pilot project on automated call answering service has been started with MSF’s Baby Bonus Hotline. There are also plans to roll out ‘Ask Jamie Bot’ on Facebook Messenger in early 2019.

In the next phase, VICA chatbots will eventually replace all 90+ existing “Ask Jamie” government agency chatbots.
 
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Practising safe sex during a pandemic is good advice. People tend to fark a lot more when they are restricted from going out... :roflmao:
Tantric sex is the best!
 
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