Tinder “is experiencing with a chatbot that claims to help users improve their flirting skills,” Washington Post Reporter of Internet Washington Tatum Hunter. The chatbot is available only for users in the United States on iPhones for a limited time, and driven by the OpenAi GPT-4o in each character “starts an improvised conversation, and the user responds aloud with something flirtatious …”
“Three of them left me.”
You can earn points for jokes that the application considers “lovely” or “playful.” You lose points if your round trip seems “shameless” or “peculiar” … he asked me to speak out loud in my phone and win the romantic interest of several characters of AI.
The first scenario involved a financial analyst named Charles, whom I have supposedly found myself at Tokyo airport after accidentally changing our luggage. I did my best to be educated with the financial type that stole my suitcase, asking questions about his trip and agreeing to go to coffee. But the game had some critical comments: I should try to connect more emotionally using humor or stories of my life. My next Go had me at a Dallas wedding trying to flirt with Andrew, a data analyst who had supposedly stumbled with the place, under a speech, because he had been looking for a quiet place to … analyze data. This time I kept the playful things, rummaging Andrew for crashing a wedding. Andrew didn’t like that. “I opted to disconnect” mocking this person instead of helping him mix at the wedding, the application said. Apparently, a failure on my part, and also a reminder why the generative AI does not belong everywhere …
Upon entering, I was concerned that AI’s characters would overcome the people I have met in appointment applications and I would fall for a robot love. Instead, they behaved typically for chatbots: drifts towards biased norms and not capture the complexity of human emotions and interactions. The “game” seemed to replicate the worst parts of flirting: confusion, unclear expectations, the awkward dynamic of power, without good parts, such as the spark of curiosity over another person. Tinder launched the Foot Fools day, probably as an offer of impressions and traffic. But his limitations eclipsed his novelty …
Hillary Paine, Vice President of Products, Growth and Income of Tinder, said in an email that will play an “important role in the future of appointments and the evolution of Tinder.” She said the game is destined to be silly and that the company “leaned in the campina.” The Z generation is a socially anxious generation, Paine said, and this age group is willing to endure some shudder if it leads to a “real connection.”
The article suggests that it is another example of companies “anxious to incorporate this new technology, often without considering whether it adds any value for users.” But “as applications like Tinder and Bumble they lose users in the middle ofBurnout of appointment applications“Companies are resorting to AI to gain new growth.” (The application of Rizz dating “uses AI to self -suffice good lines to use”, while the teaser “turns a chatbot that is based on his personality, destined to speak and behave as he would AI accompaniment bots For the millions “) and the company’s boat company Replika” has more than 30 million users … “
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