Skip to main content

Microsoft says bizarre travel article was not created by ‘unsupervised AI’

According to a recent article posted by Microsoft Travel on microsoft.com, attractions worth checking out on a visit to the Canadian capital of Ottawa include the National War Memorial, Parliament Hill, Fairmont Château Laurier, Ottawa Food Bank … hang on, Ottawa Food Bank?

Spotted in recent days by Canada-based tech writer Paris Marx, the article puts Ottawa Food Bank at number 3 in a list of 15 must-see places in the city. And as if that wasn’t bad enough, the accompanying description even suggests visiting it “on an empty stomach.”

Recommended Videos

The piece was originally thought to have been created by generative artificial intelligence (AI). But Microsoft has since said that “unsupervised AI” was not involved. The entire article has now been taken down, though you can view an archived version of it.

Here’s the food bank description in full:

Please enable Javascript to view this content

“Ottawa Food Bank — The organization has been collecting, purchasing, producing, and delivering food to needy people and families in the Ottawa area since 1984. We observe how hunger impacts men, women, and children on a daily basis, and how it may be a barrier to achievement. People who come to us have jobs and families to support, as well as expenses to pay. Life is already difficult enough. Consider going into it on an empty stomach.”

A screenshot of a Microsoft travel article.
Microsoft

With its insertion into the travel article clearly an error — and an awful one at that — it seemed probable  that the piece was knocked together using generative AI, a technology that we know Microsoft has a huge interest in.

But a statement from the company claimed the issue was “due to human error,” adding that it was “not published by an unsupervised AI” but instead generated through “a combination of algorithmic techniques with human review, not a large language model or AI system.”

Still, the company appears to have fallen short on several counts. First, it failed to perform proper human checks on the article before posting it, and second, nowhere on the webpage did it say that the content was generated through “algorithmic techniques.”

The mishap demonstrates the continuing need for human oversight when technology is used to create content. Slip-ups can be costly, as evidenced by a recent case in New York City in which a lawyer used the AI-powered ChatGPT chatbot to find examples of legal cases that he then included in a document to support a client’s case. But it was later found that ChatGPT had made them all up.

This article has been updated to include details of Microsoft’s statement.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
I tried out Google’s latest AI tool that generates images in a fun, new way
Google's Whisk AI tool being used with images.

Google’s latest AI tool helps you automate image generation even further. The tool is called Whisk, and it's based on Google’s latest Imagen 3 image generation model. Rather than relying solely on text prompts, Whisk helps you create your desired images using other images as the base prompt.

Whisk is currently in an experimental phase, but once set up it's fairly easy to navigate. Google detailed in a blog post introducing Whisk that it is intended for “rapid visual exploration, not pixel-perfect edits.”

Read more
ChatGPT o1 vs. o1-mini vs. 4o: Which should you use?
ChatGPT on a laptop

We're now into the third year of the AI boom, and industry leaders are showing no signs of slowing down, pushing out newer and (presumably) more capable models on a regular basis. ChatGPT, of course, remains the undisputed leader.

But with more than a half-dozen models available from OpenAI alone, figuring out which one to use for your specific project can be a daunting task.
GPT o1

Read more
ChatGPT vs. Perplexity: battle of the AI search engines
Perplexity on Nothing Phone 2a.

The days of Google's undisputed internet search dominance may be coming to an end. The rise of generative AI has ushered in a new means of finding information on the web, with ChatGPT and Perplexity AI leading the way.

Unlike traditional Google searches, these platforms scour the internet for information regarding your query, then synthesize an answer using a conversational tone rather than returning a list of websites where the information can be found. This approach has proven popular with users, even though it's raised some serious concerns with the content creators that these platforms scrape for their data. But which is best for you to actually use? Let's dig into how these two AI tools differ, and which will be the most helpful for your prompts.
Pricing and tiers
Perplexity is available at two price points: free and Pro. The free tier is available to everybody and offers unlimited "Quick" searches, 3 "Pro" searches per day, and access to the standard Perplexity AI model. The Pro plan, which costs $20/month, grants you unlimited Quick searches, 300 Pro searches per day, your choice of AI model (GPT-4o, Claude-3, or LLama 3.1), the ability to upload and analyze unlimited files as well as visualize answers using Playground AI, DALL-E, and SDXL.

Read more