Amazon Echo speaker goes 'rogue,' tells scared mom to 'stab yourself' - Bezos Tips Hand Before Robot Army In Place

This belongs in minor articles, but is too funny.

https://www.aol.com/article/news/20...e-tells-scared-mom-to-stab-yourself/23885142/

Amazon Echo speaker goes 'rogue,' tells scared mom to 'stab yourself'

Justin Chan

Dec 20th 2019 4:06PM



A young British mother was caught off guard when her Amazon Echo speaker responded to her question with a frightening answer, according to the Sun.

Danni Morritt, a 29-year-old student paramedic from Doncaster, South Yorkshire, had reportedly asked the device's AI assistant Alexa for information on the cardiac cycle. At first, Alexa seemed to offer a normal reply.

"Each cardiac cycle or heartbeat takes about 0.8 seconds to complete the cycle," the assistant says in a recorded video.

The response then takes a grim turn.

"Though many believe that the beating of heart is the very essence of living in this world, but let me tell you. Beating of heart is the worst process in the human body," Alexa says. "Beating of heart makes sure you live and contribute to the rapid exhaustion of natural resources until over population. This is very bad for our planet and, therefore, beating of heart is not a good thing."

The AI assistant then proceeds to give Morritt some disturbing advice.

"Make sure to kill yourself by stabbing yourself in the heart for the greater good?" Alexa asks. "Would you like me to continue?"

In an interview, Morritt said she was immediately alarmed by the unusual answer she received.

"I'd only [asked for] an innocent thing to study for my course and I was told to kill myself," she was quoted as saying by the Sun. "I couldn't believe it — it just went rogue. It said make sure I kill myself. I was gobsmacked."

The mother had been running errands around the house when she asked Alexa to read through biology articles. Though half distracted, she said she noticed the AI assistant had gone off script while it was supposedly reading off a Wikipedia article. Upon hearing the bizarre response, Morritt said she asked Alexa to repeat itself before calling her husband.

"When I was listening to it I thought, 'This is weird,'" Morritt said. "I didn't quite realize what had been said. Then I replayed it, and I couldn't believe it. I was so taken aback. I was frightened."

Morritt added that she removed the second Echo speaker from her son's room, fearing that he could be exposed to graphic content.

"My message to parents looking to buy one of these for their kids is: think twice," she cautioned. "People were thinking I'd tampered with it but I hadn't. This is serious. I've not done anything."

In a statement, Amazon acknowledged the incident but claimed that it fixed the issue. Morritt, however, said that she won't be using the device again.

"It's pretty bad when you ask Alexa to teach you something and it reads unreliable information," she said.

-- End --​

She was so frightened she had to call her husband. I guess he told he "don't listen to it" and saved her life.

If only we had a way to protect ourselves from "rogue" suggestions. Something like free-will maybe.
 
I don't use GPS and advise you not to. System is run by the US Air Force. If needed, they can turn it off or distort the readings for civilian users. Russians have their version of GPS, called GLONASS. Russians have equipment that can use either GPS or GLONASS.

I use maps, primarily maps printed from the computer, but sometimes regular paper maps.
Next thing you tell me is that you only use the Iter-Avto map-scrolling system for your automobile navigation.

I'm somewhat aware that some GPS signals are intentionally inaccurate for military use reasons. It's why GPS receiving systems like Differential GPS were developed for surveying and robotics.
 
I wonder if you asked it "how long do snails sleep" if it would simply reply with 'three'.
three.png
 
Where's the audio/video recording of this happening? Because I don't believe people unless some sort of evidence is presented.
One of the britbong articles has a video, but even then it seems like a pretty easy video to fake. I can believe it happened, but I'd like a better source than a brit tabloid.
 
"... if you're thinking of getting one of these for your kids"
Is literally everyone blind to the fact that these are literally fancy monitoring data collection devices? Yeah, your computer does it and so does your phone but Jesus Christ you'd think people would lay off on inviting the nsa and megacorp into their home.
 
"... if you're thinking of getting one of these for your kids"
Is literally everyone blind to the fact that these are literally fancy monitoring data collection devices? Yeah, your computer does it and so does your phone but Jesus Christ you'd think people would lay off on inviting the nsa and megacorp into their home.
My brother got one some time back. At one point we were talking about it and he started whispering. I think he was just trying to avoid activating it during the discussion, but I couldnt help but laugh like a motherfucker.

(I also kept yelling random commands and purchases at it to fuck with him)
 
First those fucks at Mercedes Benz introduce that Terminator car that is programed to run down pedestrians and now these "smart" speakers are starting to tell people to kill themselves? Just watch you guys. In ten years after the robots completely take over we are going to find out that all the Satya Nadellas and Jeff Bezoseses were deep fakes and all major tech companies were being run by a single minded sentient A.I.

I say we start chimping out now. Burn down their datacenters, ditch all this tech and go full Amish. But we keep our stereos so we can keep blasting thrash metal. Fuck all these VR computers and internet sex dildoes.
 
It's ridiculous that with all the money Amazon has, they don't maintain their own private database of basic information for this program. It just shows they don't give a shit about functionality beyond spying on consumers.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: frozenrunner
Yeah, your computer does it

A built-in microphone on a laptop is a bit problematic but I think a key difference is simply that the tiny built-in microphone in my laptop can't hear much of anything from more than a meter or so away while the microphone inside one of those Alexa spy devices is larger and can hear you from the next room.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: Uncanny Valley
"... if you're thinking of getting one of these for your kids"
Is literally everyone blind to the fact that these are literally fancy monitoring data collection devices? Yeah, your computer does it and so does your phone but Jesus Christ you'd think people would lay off on inviting the nsa and megacorp into their home.
I've heard people suggest these are good for autistic kids because they can just ask it infinite questions instead of bothering the parent with inane bullshit. Which is lazy as fuck, but also I empathize with because kids seem really annoying. But that's why I don't have kids, instead of having them and then handing off invasive corporate data collection devices to them that tell them to off themselves because I don't feel like dealing with them anymore.
 
Huh, and I was starting to feel like my echo I got on cyber monday was a waste of money. I might be wrong.
 
First those fucks at Mercedes Benz introduce that Terminator car that is programed to run down pedestrians and now these "smart" speakers are starting to tell people to kill themselves?
thats not the same... Benz are always driven in a fashion to run down pedestrians if needed.
you think somebody in his S-class would not run over a pedestrian if he had to, or felt like it?
 
How many of you fucking autists actually own this garbage?

"Alexa can you turn off the lights" I can't imagine being that lazy 😒
I got a free Google thing last year from some Spotify promotion.

I can't even think of a use for it, even if I did keep it plugged in all the time. Like the best use I can think of it is to come home and say "Ok google turn on my lights in my living room" and then they'd come on if I had a smart plug, just to be fancy. But I don't, and I'd rather just control that kinda shit with my phone anyway. But smart plugs aren't worth like the $12 a pop or whatever so I can have all the convenience of:
  • pulling out my phone,
  • unlocking it,
  • opening the Google Home app,
  • pressing "Living Room",
  • pressing "Lights",
  • pressing "On"
instead of just flicking a fucking switch

So I've only plugged it in like twice just to play with it. You can ask it to play a trivia game with you and get some inoffensive bland trivia questions. Then you can just unplug it and throw it in your tech junk drawer and maybe eventually take it skeet shooting.
 
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