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Families traveling the world as beneficial by AI

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Families traveling the world as beneficial by AI

Michael Morametti (left) family (Photo Credit=Michael Morametti)

A family that makes a ChatGPT-based artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot create a travel schedule and travels based on it’s a hot topic. That is the story of Michael Motamedi, an American travel influencer, reported by Insider on the twentieth (local time). The couple, together with their 18-month-old daughter, are traveling the world as beneficial by an AI chatbot.

Motamedi plans to jot down an internet serial titled ‘No fixed address’ after experimenting with traveling as guided by an AI chatbot over the following six months. The AI ​​tool he relies on is a travel assistant chatbot created by an organization called GuideGeek.

The Motamedi family entrusts most of their travel decisions to the chatbot. From selecting a destination to deciding what to eat and where to eat, the chatbot recommends it. Nevertheless, issues that require real-time selection, corresponding to booking a flight or deciding where to remain, don’t ask the chatbot.

“It’s more nerve-wracking while you’re not making your personal decisions,” he told Insider. “It’s type of like an out-of-body experience.” The AI ​​chatbot beneficial Morocco as the following destination to him, who’s currently staying in Mexico. After staying in Morocco for a month, he said he would ask the chatbot where he would visit next, saying, “I don’t know where I will probably be in July.”

The Motamedi family also experienced a ‘hallucination’ phenomenon wherein a chatbot based on a language model responded plausibly to unfaithful content. When asked to offer the history of a bakery in Mexico City, the chatbot gave an inaccurate answer.

Motamedi said she was also afraid to let an AI chatbot plan her family’s life for the following six months. He added that he knows chatbots are sure to make mistakes and can fact-check now and again relatively than blindly follow advice because “family comes first.”

Reporter Jeong Byeong-il jbi@aitimes.com

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