Microsoft brings Bing chatbot to phones less than a week after it went off the rails

Microsoft is ready to take its new Bing chatbot mainstream—less than a week after making major fixes to stop the artificially intelligent search engine from going off the rails.

The company said Wednesday it is bringing the new AI technology to its Bing smartphone app, as well as the app for its Edge internet browser.Putting the new AI-enhanced search engine into the hands of smartphone users is meant to give Microsoft an advantage over Google, which dominates the internet search business but hasn’t yet released such a chatbot to the public.

In the two weeks since Microsoft unveiled its revamped Bing, more than a million users around the world have experimented with a public preview of the new product after signing up for a wait list to try it. Microsoft said most of those users responded positively, but others found Bing was insulting them, professing its love or voicing other disturbing or bizarre language.

Powered by some of the same technology behind the popular writing tool ChatGPT, built by Microsoft partner OpenAI, the new Bing is part of an emerging class of AI systems that have mastered human language and grammar after ingesting a huge trove of books and online writings. They can compose songs, recipes, and emails on command, or concisely summarize concepts with information found across the internet. But they are also error-prone and unwieldy.

Reports of Bing’s odd behavior led Microsoft to look for a way to curtail Bing’s propensity to respond with strong emotional language to certain questions. It’s mostly done that by limiting the length and time of conversations with the chatbot, forcing users to start a fresh chat after several turns. But the upgraded Bing also now politely declines questions that it would have responded to just a week ago.

“I’m sorry but I prefer not to continue this conversation,” it says when asked technical questions about how it works or the rules that guide it. “I’m still learning, so I appreciate your understanding and patience.”

Microsoft said its new technology will also be integrated into its Skype messaging service.

https://www.fastcompany.com/90854458/microsoft-brings-bing-chatbot-to-phones-less-than-a-week-after-it-went-off-the-rails?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Created 2y | Feb 22, 2023, 5:21:14 PM


Login to add comment

Other posts in this group

This accuracy-obsessed weather app does one thing oh so well

Whether weather is always on your radar or merely a passing front of occasional interest, having an on-demand eye on the world around you is one of the most powerful slices of sorcery you can set

Jun 28, 2025, 11:50:03 AM | Fast company - tech
These two game-changing breakthroughs advance us toward artificial general intelligence

The biggest technology game changers don’t always grab the biggest headlines. Two emerging

Jun 28, 2025, 11:50:02 AM | Fast company - tech
WhatsApp just got banned on Capitol Hill. Here’s how you can make the Meta messaging platform more secure

The U.S. House of Representatives’ Chief Administrative Officer (CAO), Catherine Szpindor, informed congressional staffers this week that WhatsApp is now

Jun 28, 2025, 9:30:05 AM | Fast company - tech
Why the ‘Tiny Chef’ cancellation broke the internet’s heart

Justice for Tiny Chef.

A now-viral clip of the stop-motion animated star of The Tiny Chef Show getting laid off directly by the execs at “Mickelflodeon” has tugged a

Jun 27, 2025, 7:30:07 PM | Fast company - tech
Bumble is stumbling. Tinder is flagging. But this go-to gay dating app is thriving

Dating app Bumble continues to lose its footing. After subpar earnings, sluggish user growth, and internal stagnation, the company has

Jun 27, 2025, 5:20:04 PM | Fast company - tech
Why Apple is revamping its App Store terms in the European Union

Apple has revamped its app store policies in the

Jun 27, 2025, 2:50:06 PM | Fast company - tech
This AI-powered social app aims to end loneliness—by ‘engineering chance’

“An opportunity to choose chance.”

That’s what social platform startup 222 claims to offer its members. It isn’t a dating app—there’s no swiping, and, mo

Jun 27, 2025, 2:50:05 PM | Fast company - tech