Is it ethical to have a human-sounding robot interact with someone without informing the other party that he or she is in conversation with an it? Real question.
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Replying to @StevenLevy
Brian Roemmele Retweeted Brian Roemmele
Steven, great question. Something I have thought deeply about since the 1980s, the voice quality was obvious back than. The best example is in the prosthetic use cases this video is actually the first time this was tried:https://twitter.com/brianroemmele/status/993910734198210560?s=21 …
Brian Roemmele added,
Brian Roemmele @BrianRoemmeleToday with the Google Assistant Phone Callout Duplex announcement today we are reminded of the very first#VoiceCommerce transaction. I got to meet Donald Sherman and this is the first time a#VoiceFirst system called out, He ordered a Pizza.#GoogleIO https://youtu.be/A4XMexY6x5c2 replies 1 retweet 3 likes
Steven, in the prosthetic use case I think it would certainly not need to be disclosed for many reasons. This in my view would extend to non prosthetic use cases if the interaction is “normal”. The next question is what would be considered abusive? Have ideas on this...
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