Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Businesses Communications Google Software

Google Is Being Vague With Disclosure In Early Real-World Duplex Calls (theverge.com) 71

A small group of Pixel owners in "select" U.S. cities are able to use Google's new Duplex feature to automatically make voice calls to restaurants and other businesses on their behalf. Referencing a demo from VentureBeat, The Verge notes that "the exchange between Duplex and a restaurant on the other side of the call is raising some early concerns about transparency." From the report: [Y]ou'll notice that Duplex never identifies itself as a robot. It never tells the person taking the call that they're interacting with an automated system. "Hi, I'm calling to make a reservation for a client. I'm calling from Google, so the call may be recorded," is what Duplex says to begin the conversation. And that little bit -- about the call coming "from Google" and potentially being recorded -- is the only disclosure that it ever provides. From then on, Duplex handles the requested dinner reservation smoothly.

This disclosure doesn't match up with a promotional video for Duplex that Google posted to YouTube back in June. In that example (embedded below), Duplex makes it very clear that it's a bot. "Hi, I'm the Google Assistant calling to make a reservation for a client. This automated call will be recorded." That's a much better approach. You're talking to the Google Assistant. It's an automated call, and it is being recorded; no maybes about it.
The report notes that some Duplex calls -- such as the one VentureBeat included in their demo -- are actually handled by a human. "When a human operator at Google places a Duplex call, they don't necessarily disclose anything about Google Assistant or note it's an automated call," reports The Verge. "Because it's not. Not entirely, anyway. Google's Duplex tests involve a mix of the two; some are led by Googlers, while others let the AI steer. The majority of calls are the latter and automated, from what I'm told."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Is Being Vague With Disclosure In Early Real-World Duplex Calls

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Forget that shit.

    • They want to get as many calls out before a deadline as they can because in the fine print that they will not share with you, they think they try to charge back the customer for the call
    • Seems to me that's exactly the point. People hang up right away when they know it's not a real person on the other end.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      So a person with a disability using the same technology needs to out themselves first?

  • by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @06:40AM (#57706580)
    A service that will send someone you eat the food for you then come back and regurgitate it so you don't have to move off your lazy ass ever.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I'd use this for recruiters. They all ask the same stupid questions that were answered in my CV or on my profile page, so a robot could easily deal with them. It could also filter out the ones who don't understand the difference between C and C#, or Javascript and embedded.

    • That's called McDonald's, they then sell you the regurgitated food, or so it appears....
  • by sad_ ( 7868 ) on Tuesday November 27, 2018 @07:42AM (#57706722) Homepage

    why do you have to know if you're talking to an AI or not?
    i don't see how that even matters, i know people get worked up about it, but i don't know why.

    • by msauve ( 701917 )
      ...and robo-calls are nothing new. In fact, this seems better than many. At least it's honest, unlike a lot of the political ones which often start with something like "Hi, this is X Y, calling to urge you to support..." No, it isn't person X Y, it's a recording being played back by an automated dialer.
      • Well you just gave a reason why I'd like to know if it is a robot calling - because robot calls are not to be trusted.

    • why do you have to know if you're talking to an AI or not? i don't see how that even matters, i know people get worked up about it, but i don't know why.

      Because they are engaging in fraudulent behavior.

      They are pretending that a real human, presumably (or at any rate, possibly) with morals and feelings, is talking to you, but it's just a machine.

      • How does this minor masquerade harm you? Why does unknowingly interacting with our new machine partners fill you with such loathing? Do you get worked up about answering machines, too? Luddite.

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          How does this minor masquerade harm you? Why does unknowingly interacting with our new machine partners fill you with such loathing? Do you get worked up about answering machines, too? Luddite.

          It's not the bot, it's the flakiness of the client.

          Already restaurants are starting to not allow reservations because OpenTable and other things let clients book 5-10 restaurants and not show up. It's starting to cost restaurants real money since that table isn't revenue generating.

          It's getting to the point where to r

      • They are pretending that a real human

        They are doing nothing of the sort. They are just communicating in the way someone expects to communicate on a phone.

  • I've called lots of companies for various reasons. Almost always they have an automated IVR system up front, and never do they disclose that it isn't a human you're speaking to.

    Granted, it's usually obvious very quickly that it's automated, but there's still no disclosure.

    (I agree it should be disclosed though.)

    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      All of those services I've ever used have been really fucking irritating: take forever to navigate through, laggy, struggling to interpret what I say correctly, and you typically have to repeat security info to the human you eventually do talk to. A shitty experience.

  • Most people misspell the Google Dupelacs Service as Duplex and misunderstand the disclosure.

    The disclosure is in the name.

    Dupe (v) = to cheat, to mislead, to mulct

    Lacs (n) (rhymes with packs) = A lot, very many, plethora, umpteen, innumerable, (from Hindi lac meaning one hundred thousand)

  • Just hang up
  • Is presuming 2 party consent ok?

  • This reminds me so much about John Sculley's Knowledge Navigator vanity project, which you can see here [youtube.com].

    Interesting execution of the concept; but like so many others here I hang up on a automated call.

  • Just wait til the telemarketers get a hold of this somehow. They can just get rid of the 3rd world country people they hire and use this!

And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones

Working...