<Anchor>

Google has come up with a new artificial intelligence technology that can talk like a human and answer questions.

I can also speak Korean, but Washington correspondent Seungmo Nam checked how it differs from the existing artificial intelligence.

<Reporter>

Google has fully unveiled the artificial intelligence chatbot 'Bard' that asks and answers questions like a human to 180 countries around the world.

We plan to increase the number of supported languages to 40, and Google's first choice after English was Korean and Japanese.

[Xixi Xiao/Vice President of Google Assistant: 'Bard' will also be available in more languages besides English. From today, you can communicate with 'Bard' in Japanese and Korean.]

They used Korea and Japan as test beds for new technologies.

Right away, we are competing for the chatGPT and chatbot market.

On the right is Bard created by Google, and on the left is ChatGPT created by Open AI.

Both AIs can use Hangul.

Let's see what the difference is.

I asked who the King of England is now.

Bard correctly replied Charles III, but ChatGPT said Elizabeth II.

When asked who would win if Biden and Trump faced off in next year's U.S. presidential election, Bard said it was difficult to say who would win, citing factors such as approval ratings, while ChatGPT declined to answer, saying he was an AI-driven man with no political leanings and could not predict the outcome.

Both chatbots are still incomplete, with staggered answers changing if you ask the same question.

Amid the rapid development of AI, so are the concerns.

[Jeffrey Hinton/Professor, University of Toronto, creator of "deep learning": Even if AI can't pull the lever directly, it can certainly get people to pull the lever. It turns out that you can manipulate people (through AI). You can break in without having to go directly to a building in Washington.]

In addition, it is pointed out that regulations to prevent the side effects of AI, which may pose a threat to humans, such as information manipulation, should also be speeded up.

(Video Interview: Oh Jeong-sik, Video Editing: Jung Yong-hwa)