Again, what if you say that to a human being and he or she says, “you know what? I am helpful and I’m feeling generous today! I will give you what you want! $1 flights for you!” then what should the airline do?
The chatbot is there to replace a human. Plain and simple. So if it’s “gameable,” that’s not the consumer’s problem. Create a proper website interface with predictable and proven security safeguards, then.
tiramichu@lemm.ee 8 months ago
This is an interesting discussion, thank you.
From a technical perspective then absolutely, systems should be built with sufficient safeguards in place that makes mis-selling or providing misinformation as close to impossible as it can be.
But accepting that things will sometimes go wrong, this is more a discussion if determining who is in the right when they do.
My primary interest is in the moral perspective - and also legal, assuming that the law should follow what is morally correct (though sadly it sometimes does not).
With that out of the way, then yes, if a human agent said “sure fuck it I’ll give it you for $1” then yes I would expect that to be honoured, because a human agent was involved and that gives the interaction the full support and faith of the company, from the customer perspective. The very crucial part here, morally, is that the customer has solid grounds to believe this is a genuine offer made by the company in good faith.
A chatbot may be a representative of the company, but it is still a technical system, and it can still produce errors like any other. Where my personal opinion comes down on this is interpretation of intent.
Convincing a chatbot to sell you something for $1 when you know that’s an impossible deal is no different morally than trying to check out with that $3 TV in your basket that you equally know is a pricing mistake
It is rarely ever purely black-and-white from a moral perspective, and the deciding factor is, back to my previous point, is whether the customer reasonably knows they are being given an impossible deal due to a technical issue.
Simply:
The customer knows they are ripping off the company due to an error = should be in the company’s favour
The customer believes they are being made a genuine offer = should be in the customer’s favour (even if it was a mistake)
drcobaltjedi@programming.dev 8 months ago
Yeah so, we have a way of making chat bots that have safe gaurds to not sell overly discounted tickets or whatever. Its the normal dumb chatbots we’ve used for years. They aren’t smart, they can’t tell you a story, they can’t pull random law out of their ass. No its the ones with a handful of canned responses with a handful of questions it can answer because that’s all it’s programmed to do. Using an LLM for this is not only overkill but fucking stupid. LLM’s are only able to say what they think is the next thing in a conversation. If you ask it for a discount it’ll probably say “sure here’s 15% off” then not actually apply it.
laughterlaughter@lemmy.world 8 months ago
It is an interesting discussion for sure.
You are unintentionally moving the goal post. Your original argument was about “how reasonable is for a consumer to expect that certain offers are genuine.” The moral perspective is another different subject that could be discussed separately. Starting from, for example, “what do you mean by morality?” If a father is poor and his son is literally dying of starvation because the megacorps won’t hire him and the government failed him, then he can trick a chatbot, or a human being, to sell them food at $1, is he being immoral? But again, this is not part of the main discussion. So we should cast the moral part aside.
Why does this have to change with a chatbot? What makes a human so especial?
Humans make mistakes - we all say that mistakes are part of being human. Can’t humans go rogue or have a bad day, or be particularly distracted at that moment? Airliners have collided mid-air due to human error, for example. I would not expect a customer representative to have the sharpness of a flight controller.
Let’s remember that Air Canada, replaced a human with a chatbot expecting the chatbot to outperform the human it replaced. Are you still on the side of the company knowing that?
You can’t tell me you’ve never offered anything for sale on a local marketplace. Sellers get hit all the time with arguments like “A PS5 for $250? I’ll buy it from you for $5 - my daughter has cancer and she needs it! If you don’t sell it to me for $5, you’re an evil, immoral person!” And those “buyers” believe, I repeat, believe they are in the right. This is why many listings have clauses like “The price is firm. No haggling. You will be ignored if you do this,” etc, etc.
So, if you don’t really think there are people out there thinking that an $1 airline ticket is not only possible, but mandatory, then I envy you because you haven’t interacted with enough humans online.
tiramichu@lemm.ee 8 months ago
Apologies if my comments appeared to be moving the goalposts. I am.absolutely not trying to talk about morality in a wider sense. If I was then this would be a whole different argument because I believe that corporations are unethical as all hell, and consumers are usually within their moral right to exploit them as hard as possible, because that barely even scratches how badly companies exploit their customers or damage wider society. But this is - as you point out - not about that.
The aspect of morality I was interested in from the perspective of defining law is the very restricted aspect of whether the customer is acting in bad faith, knowing that they are getting a too-good-to-be-true deal, or whether they believe the offer made is legitimate.
You ask what makes a human customer service represebtative so special, in comparison to a bot, and my answer there is simply that they are human
Remember that my argument here is specifically about whether or not the customer believes the price they are being offered is genuine.
Humans agents are special in that regard because they have a huge amount of credibility in reassuring and confirming with the other person that the offer is genuine and not a mistake. They can strongly reinforce the feeling of an offer being genuine.
The law itself already (at least in the UK) distinguishes between prices presented (e.g. on a web page or the price on a shelf sticker) and direct agreements made with a person, recognising that mistakes are possible and giving the human ultimate authority.
Really, this entire argument comes down to answering this: Should information given by a chatbot be considered to have the same authority and weight as information given by a person?
My personal argument has been: “Yes, if it reasonably appears to the recipient as genuine, but no if the recipient might have reasonable cause suspect it is a mistake, knowing the information was provided by a computer system and that mistakes are possible.”
For most people in this thread however, it seems (based on my downvotes) their feeling has been “Yes, it has the same authority always and absolutely”
I can accept that I’m very much outvoted on this one, but I hope you can appreciate my arguments nonetheless.
laughterlaughter@lemmy.world 8 months ago
And that’s what happened in this case. The man thought the chatbot was giving him genuine information. “My family member is dying. Do you have a discount for bereavement situations?” The chatbot: [And I guarantee you, it did say this] “I’m so sorry you’re going through difficult times. Of course! Here’s what you need to do.” The customer is already in a turmoil of emotions, so we can’t really expect him to say “wait, this is too good to be true,” especially if that what he is asking precisely. It’s not like he is saying “can you put me on first class for free because I feel like it?” It’s literally “What’s your bereavement discount policy?” which is something airline companies do at their discretion. So, yes, the company must honor it.
I do appreciate your comments.