• @whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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      259 months ago

      Corporate IT here. You’re assuming they’re smart enough to budget for this. They aren’t. They never are. Things are rarely if never implemented with any thought put into any other scenario that isn’t happy path.

      • @Patches@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        As a corporate IT person also. Hello.

        But we do put thought into what can go wrong. But no we don’t budget for it, and as far as we are concerned 99% success rate is 100% correct 100% of the time. Nevermind 7 billion transactions per year multiplied by 99% is a fuck ton of failure.

        • @whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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          59 months ago

          Amen. Fwiw at my work we have an AI steering committee. No idea what they’re doing though because you’d think enough articles and lawsuits against OpenAI and Microsoft on shady practices most recently allowing AI to be used by militaries potentially to kill people. I love knowing my org supports companies that enable the war machine.

  • @TehWorld@lemmy.world
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    1379 months ago

    Great! Please make sure that your server system is un-racked and physically present in court for cross examination.

  • 𝕯𝖎𝖕𝖘𝖍𝖎𝖙
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    1279 months ago

    “Airline tried arguing virtual assistant was solely responsible for its own actions”

    that’s not how corporations work. that’s not how ai works. that’s not how any of this works.

    • @Pantoffel@feddit.de
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      209 months ago

      Oh, it is if they are using a dump integration of LLM in their Chatbot that is given more or less free reign. Lots of companies do that, unfortunately.

      • Fushuan [he/him]
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        189 months ago

        If it’s integrated in their service, unless they have a disclaimer and the customer has to accept it to use the bot, they are the ones telling the customer that whatever the bot says is true.

        If I contract a company to do X and one of their employees fucks shit up, I will ask for damages to the company, and They internally will have to deal with the worker. The bot is the worker in this instance.

        • @lunar17@lemmy.world
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          19 months ago

          So what you’re saying is that companies will start hiring LLMs as “independent contractors”?

          • Fushuan [he/him]
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            89 months ago

            No, the company contracted the service from another company, but that’s irrelevant. I’m saying that in any case, the company is responsible for any service it provides unless there’s a disclaimer. Be that service a chat bot, a ticketing system, a store, workers.

            If an Accenture contractor fucks up, the one liable for the client is Accenture. Now, Accenture may sue the worker but that’s besides the point. If a store mismanaged products and sold wrong stuff or inputted incorrect prices, you go against the store chain, not the individual store, nor the worker. If a ticketing system takes your money but sends you an invalid ticket, you complain to the company that manages, it, not the ones that program it.

            It’s pretty simple actually.

    • @Delta_V@lemmy.world
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      89 months ago

      My 2024 bingo card didn’t have a major corporation litigating in favor of AI rights in order to avoid liability, but I’m not disappointed to see it.

  • @Son_of_dad@lemmy.world
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    1179 months ago

    Why would air Canada even fight this? He got a couple hundred bucks and they paid at least 50k in lawyer fees to fight paying those. They could have just given him the cost of the lawyer’s fees and be done with it

      • tryptaminev 🇵🇸 🇺🇦 🇪🇺
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        439 months ago

        Which is fascinating, that they themselves thought there was any doubt about it, or they could argue such a doubt.

        This is the same like arguing “It wasn’t me who shot the mailmen dead. It was my automated home self defense system”

        • @frunch@lemmy.world
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          159 months ago

          Agree 100%–i mean who are you gonna fine, the bot? The company that sold you the bot? This is a simple case of garbage in, garbage out–if they set it up properly and vetted its operation, they wouldn’t be trying to make such preposterous objections. I’m glad this went to court where it was definitively shut down.

          Fuck Canada Air. The guy already lost a loved one, now they wanna drag him through all this over a pittance? To me, this is the corporate mindset–going to absolutely any length necessary to hoover up more money, even the smallest of scraps.

      • brianorca
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        59 months ago

        A settlement would cost less, can be kept private, and doesn’t set precedent. Now they have an actual court case judgement, and that does set precedent.

    • @RobotToaster@mander.xyz
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      149 months ago

      I think some companies have a policy of fighting every lawsuit and making everything take as long as possible, simply to discourage more lawsuits.

    • @intensely_human@lemm.ee
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      119 months ago

      Because there is something far nastier in the world than self interest. This airline seems to me like it was operating from a place of spite.

    • @SpaceCowboy@lemmy.ca
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      109 months ago

      Just how Air Canada does things now. I think it largely stemmed from the pandemic where people gave them leeway on things being a bit messed up. But now they’ve fallen into a habit of not taking responsibility for anything.

  • andrew_bidlaw
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    1049 months ago

    That’s an important precedent. Many companies turned to LLMs to cut the cost and dodge any liability for whatever model can say. It’s great that they get rekt in the court.

  • Optional
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    879 months ago

    Lol. “It wasn’t us - it was the bot! The bot did it! Yeah!”

    • TxzK
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      319 months ago

      “See officer, we didn’t make these deepfakes, the AI did. Arrest the AI instead”

  • @RobotToaster@mander.xyz
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    839 months ago

    That seems like a stupid argument?

    Even if a human employee did that aren’t organisations normally vicariously liable?

    • @atx_aquarian@lemmy.world
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      749 months ago

      That’s what I thought of, at first. Interestingly, the judge went with the angle of the chatbot being part of their web site, and they’re responsible for that info. When they tried to argue that the bot mentioned a link to a page with contradicting info, the judge said users can’t be expected to check one part of the site against another part to determine which part is more accurate. Still works in favor of the common person, just a different approach than how I thought about it.

      • Carighan Maconar
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        259 months ago

        I like this. LLMs are powerful tools, but being rebranded as “AI” and crammed into ~everything is just bullshit.

        The more legislation like this happens where the employing entity is responsible for the - lack of - accuracy, the better. At some point they’ll notice they cannot guarantee the correct information is the only one provided as that’s not how LLMs work in their function as stochastic parrots, and they’ll stop using them for a lot of things. Hopefully sooner rather than later.

        • lad
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          29 months ago

          This is actually a very good outcome if achievable, leave LLMs to be used where there’s nothing important on the line or have humans control them

  • @kandoh@reddthat.com
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    629 months ago

    A computer can never be held responsible so a computer must never make management decisions

    • IBM in the 80s and 90s

    A computer can never be held responsible so a computer must make all management decisions

    • Corporations in 2025
  • @Baggie@lemmy.zip
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    449 months ago

    Hey dumbasses maybe don’t let a loose llm represent your company if you can’t control what it’s saying. It’s not a real person, you can’t throw blame to a non sentient being.

  • @Mr_Blott@lemmy.world
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    389 months ago

    If you type “biz” instead of “business” in the first couple of lines, surely you’re not expecting me to actually keep reading?!

    • @frunch@lemmy.world
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      239 months ago

      I went ahead and read it anyway. I actually had to Google the last word of the article: natch. It’s slang for “naturally”. We’re living in interesting times. Glad the guy got compensated after going through that ordeal.

    • Doofus Magoo
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      69 months ago

      That’s just “El Reg’s” style; they’ve been that way for years. Don’t let their pseudoinformality fool you, though, they know their stuff.

      • @Mr_Blott@lemmy.world
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        29 months ago

        Yeah, you mean they’ve been getting worse for years! Would expect better from a UK based publication that isn’t a tabloid, tbh

  • Flying Squid
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    369 months ago

    Oh good, we’ve entered into the “we can’t be held responsible for what our machines do” age of late-stage capitalism.

  • @rbesfe@lemmy.ca
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    229 months ago

    Par for the course for this airline, in my experience. They’re allergic to responsibility.

  • @shiroininja@lemmy.world
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    169 months ago

    I can’t wait for something like this to hit SCOTUS. We’ve already declared corporations are people and money is free speech, why wouldn’t we declare chatbots solely responsible for their own actions? Lmao 😂😂💀💀😭😭

    • Bob Robertson IX
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      29 months ago

      money is free speech

      Can someone explain this to me? I assume this is in relation to campaign finance, but what was the actual argument that makes “(spending/accepting/?) money is free speech”?

      • lad
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        19 months ago

        Maybe something along the lines of “if you can afford fines you can say whatever you want including but not limited to offence, lies, hate speech, and slander”