
But before any of them can apply it, they must first view a four-minute training video with a poorly drawn, animated, four-fingered woman that would be appropriate for websites created in the first half of the 20th century.
Use caution when using the assistant, which is one of the most crucial features of using the robot, aside from the Web 1.0-era graphics used.
The SSA expressed regret for the error in the training video in a fact sheet about the robot that was sent to employees next week. People using the robot may “refrain from uploading PII to the bot,” according to the fact sheet, which WIRED has reviewed.
One SSA staff with information of the development of the app tells WIRED that operate on the robot, known as the Agency Support Companion, began about a year ago, lengthy before Musk or Expand arrived at the company. Before being released to all SSA staff last year, the game has been in pre-testing mode since February.
The company stated in an message that the bot was “designed to aid employees with daily tasks and increase productivity” in an email that it was made available to all staff this week.
Multiple SSA workers, including front office workers, show WIRED that they completely ignored the message about the bot because they were too busy working to make up for the office staff’s limited staff size. Some claim to have recently tested the bot, but are now unsatisfied.
No one has really been talking about it, according to a cause, according to WIRED. ” I’m not certain the majority of my colleagues have watched the coaching video,” she said. I experimented a little with the chatbot, and a few of the responses I got from it were very obscure and/or inaccurate.
Another source claimed that their employees were making fun of the training videos.
” You may hear my colleagues making fun of the images. Anyone I know uses it [. It’s so awkward and awful, the source claims, adding that the chatbot also provided false information to the source.