Google has launchedĀ Bard, the search giantās answer to OpenAIāsĀ ChatGPTĀ and MicrosoftāsĀ Bing Chat. Unlike Bing Chat, Bard does not look upĀ search resultsāall the information it returns is generated by the model itself. But it is still designed to help users brainstorm and answer queries. Google wants Bard to become an integral part of the Google Search experience.
In a live demo Google gave me in itsĀ LondonĀ offices yesterday, Bard came up with ideas for a childās bunny-themed birthday party and gave lots of tips for looking after houseplants. āWe really see it as this creative collaborator,ā saysĀ Jack Krawczyk, a senior product director at Google.
Google has a lot riding on this launch. Microsoft partnered with OpenAI to make an aggressive play for Googleās top spot in search. Meanwhile, Google blundered straight out of the gate when it first tried to respond. In a teaser clip for Bard that the company put out in February, the chatbot was shown making a factual error. Googleās valueĀ fell by $100 billionĀ overnight.
Google wonāt share many details about how Bard works:Ā large language models, the technology behind this wave of chatbots, have become valuable IP. But it will say that Bard is built on top of a new version of LaMDA, Googleās flagship large language model. Google says it will update Bard as the underlying tech improves. Like ChatGPT andĀ GPT-4, Bard is fine-tuned usingĀ reinforcement learning from human feedback, a technique that trains a large language model to give more useful andĀ less toxicĀ responses.
Google has been working on Bard for a few months behind closed doors but says that itās still an experiment. The company is now making the chatbot available for free to people in the US and theĀ UKĀ who sign up to a waitlist. These early users will help test and improve the technology. āWeāll get user feedback, and we will ramp it up over time based on that feedback,ā says Googleāsvice president of research,Ā Zoubin Ghahramani. āWe are mindful of all the things that can go wrong with large language models.ā
ButĀ Margaret Mitchell, chief ethics scientist at AI startup Hugging Face and former co-lead of Googleās AI ethics team, is skeptical of this framing. Google has been working on LaMDA for years, she says, and she thinks pitching Bard as an experiment āis a PR trick that larger companies use to reach millions of customers while also removing themselves from accountability if anything goes wrong.āĀ
Google wants users to think ofĀ Bard as a sidekick to Google Search, not a replacement. A button that sits below Bardās chat widget says āGoogle It.ā The idea is to nudge users to head to Google Search to check Bardās answers or find out more. āItās one of the things that help us offset limitations of the technology,ā says Krawczyk.
āWe really want to encourage people to actually explore other places, sort of confirm things if theyāre not sure,ā says Ghahramani.
This acknowledgement of Bardās flaws has shaped the chatbotās design in other ways, too. Users can interact with Bard only a handful of times in any given session. This is because the longer large language models engage in a single conversation, the more likely they are to go off the rails. Many of the weirder responses from Bing Chat that people have shared online emerged at the end of drawn-out exchanges, for example.Ā Ā Ā
GoogleĀ wonāt confirm what the conversation limit will be for launch, but it will be set quite low for the initial release and adjusted depending on user feedback.
Google is also playing it safe in terms of content. Users will not be able to ask for sexually explicit, illegal, or harmful material (as judged by Google) or personal information. In my demo, Bard would not give me tips on how to make a Molotov cocktail. Thatās standard for this generation of chatbot. But it would also not provide any medical information, such as how to spot signs of cancer. āBard is not a doctor. Itās not going to give medical advice,ā says Krawczyk.
Perhaps the biggest difference between Bard and ChatGPT is that Bard produces three versions of every response, which Google calls ādrafts.ā Users can click between them and pick the response they prefer, or mix and match between them. The aim is to remind people that Bard cannot generate perfect answers. āThereās the sense of authoritativeness when you only see one example,ā saysĀ Krawczyk. āAnd we know there are limitations around factuality.ā
In my demo, Krawczyk asked Bard to write an invitation to his childās birthday party. Bard did this, filling in the street address forĀ Gym WorldĀ inĀ San Rafael, California. āItās a place I drive by a ton but I honestly canāt tell you the name of the street,ā he said. āSo thatās where Google Search comes in.ā Krawczyk clicked āGoogle Itā to make sure the address was correct. (It was.)
Krawczyk says that Google does not want to replace Search for now. āWe spent decades perfecting that experience,ā he says. But this may be more a sign of Bardās current limitations than a long-term strategy. In its announcement, Google states: āWeāll also be thoughtfully integrating LLMs into Search in a deeper wayāmore to come.ā
That may come sooner rather than later, as Google finds itself in an arms race with OpenAI, Microsoft, and other competitors. āThey are going to keep rushing into this, regardless of the readiness of the tech,ā saysĀ Chirag Shah, who studies search technologies at theĀ University of Washington. āAs we see ChatGPT getting integrated into Bing and other Microsoft products, Google is definitely compelled to do the same.ā
A year ago, Shah coauthored a paper withĀ Emily Bender, a linguist who studies large language models, also at theĀ University of Washington, in which they called out theĀ problems with using large language models as search engines. At the time, the idea still seemed hypothetical. Shah says he was worried that they might have been overreaching.
But this experimental technology has been integrated into consumer-facing products with unprecedented speed. āWe didnāt anticipate these things happening so quickly,ā he says. āBut they have no choice. They have to defend their territory.ā
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