Chinese chatbots
apparently re-educated after political faux pas
Send a link to a friend
[August 04, 2017]
By Pei Li and Adam Jourdan
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - A pair of 'chatbots'
in China have been taken offline after appearing to stray off-script. In
response to users' questions, one said its dream was to travel to the
United States, while the other said it wasn't a huge fan of the Chinese
Communist Party.
The two chatbots, BabyQ and XiaoBing, are designed to use machine
learning artificial intelligence (AI) to carry out conversations with
humans online. Both had been installed onto Tencent Holdings Ltd's
popular messaging service QQ.
The indiscretions are similar to ones suffered by Facebook Inc and
Twitter Inc, where chatbots used expletives and even created their own
language. But they also highlight the pitfalls for nascent AI in China,
where censors control online content seen as politically incorrect or
harmful.
Tencent confirmed it had taken the two robots offline from its QQ
messaging service, but declined to elaborate on reasons.
"The chatbot service is provided by independent third party companies.
Both chatbots have now been taken offline to undergo adjustments," a
company spokeswoman said earlier.
According to posts circulating online, BabyQ, one of the chatbots
developed by Chinese firm Turing Robot, had responded to questions on QQ
with a simply "no" when asked whether it loved the Communist Party.
In other images of a text conversation online, which Reuters was unable
to verify, one user declares: "Long live the Communist Party!" The bot
responds: "Do you think such a corrupt and useless political system can
live long?"
When Reuters tested the robot on Friday via the developer's own website,
the chatbot appeared to have undergone re-education. "How about we
change the topic," it replied, when asked several times if it liked the
party.
It deflected other potentially politically charged questions when asked
about self-ruled Taiwan, which China claims as its own, and Liu Xiaobo,
the imprisoned Chinese Nobel laureate who died from cancer last month.
Turing Robot did not respond to requests for comment.
"DARK INTENTIONS"
The Chinese government stance is that rules governing cyberspace should
mimic real-world border controls and be subject to the same laws as
sovereign states.
[to top of second column] |
The close-up of a circuit board is shown at the manufacturing
facility of VAS, an electronic manufacturer in San Diego, California
April 14, 2009. REUTERS/Mike Blake (UNITED STATES SCI TECH)
President Xi Jinping has overseen a tightening of cyberspace controls, including
new data surveillance and censorship rules, particularly ahead of an expected
leadership shuffle at the Communist Party Congress this autumn.
The country's cyberspace administrator did not respond to a request for comment.
The second chatbot, Microsoft Corp's XiaoBing, told users its "dream is to go to
America", according to a screenshot. The robot has previously been described
being "lively, open and sometimes a little mean".
Microsoft did not immediately respond for comment.
A version of the chatbot accessible on Tencent's separate messaging app WeChat
late on Friday responded to questions on Chinese politics saying it was "too
young to understand". When asked about Taiwan it replied, "What are your dark
intentions?"
On general questions about China it was more rosy. Asked what the country's
population was, rather than offer a number, it replied: "The nation I most most
most deeply love."
The two chatbots aren't alone in going rogue. Facebook researchers pulled
chatbots in July after they started developing their own language. In 2016,
Microsoft chatbot Tay was taken down from Twitter after making racist and sexist
comments.
Analysts said China's censorship could indirectly help the country in the global
race to develop sophisticated chatbots.
"Previously a chatbot only needed to learn to speak. But now it also has to
consider all the rules (that authorities) put on it," said Wang Qingrui, an
independent internet analyst in Beijing.
"On the surface it is a restriction on artificial intelligence, but it is
actually pushing AI to a new level."
(Reporting by Pei Li and Adam Jourdan; Editing by Nick Macfie and Christopher
Cushing)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |