Frequent calls
Zhang Kai from Chengdu said that while spammers used to call him two or three times a day, recently the number of such calls has increased to eight. This annoys him greatly: “I used to be able to express my indignation to the employee who dialed my number. Now, when the calls are made by workers, I don’t even have that opportunity.”
At the same time, Zhang noted that the voice programs controlled by artificial intelligence seemed quite thoughtful to him - the bots successfully answered his questions: "If you say the name of the product, you can get more detailed information about it."
Voice bots have become widespread in China since artificial intelligence venezuela number data technology became an important part of the "Made in China 2025" plan, aimed at shifting the economic development vector from manufacturing to the service sector.
According to Zion Market Research, the Chinese market for intelligent voice assistants was valued at 15.9 billion yuan ($2.3 billion) in 2017. At the time, that represented more than a third of the $6.2 billion global market, which is projected to grow to $19.6 billion by 2025.
In China, "voice assistants" are built into not only smartphones and cars, but also televisions and refrigerators. These systems help people perform everyday tasks.
that the technology is so advanced that it is becoming increasingly difficult to distinguish a bot from a real person. “The developers’ job is to sell this tool to companies. They don’t care whether it will be used ethically,” Liu adds. This partly explains why Fan and Zhang’s bots offered, among other things, to buy fake educational certificates.
Technology analyst Liu Huan believes
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