Summarized by AI Model:Overglitch/t5-small-cnn-dailymail
Latimer AI will release a bias detection tool as a Chrome browser extension . Text is given a score by the tool on a scale of 1 to 10, where 10 indicates strong bias . The product expects to be utilised by those who manage official social media accounts .
In January, Latimer AI will release a bias detection tool as a Chrome browser extension. The application assigns a score between 1 and 10, where 10 indicates strong bias. Latimer AI anticipates that the offering will draw in new customers. According to Latimer CEO John Pasmore, who spoke to Business Insider, the business expects the product to be utilised by those who manage official social media accounts or by anyone who wishes to be aware of their tone online.
“We take a question and grade the response when we compare Latimer to other applications. In order to determine who performs better from a bias standpoint, we will assess our response, ChatGPT’s response, and Claude’s response against the identical inquiry,” Pasmore stated. “It’s using our internal algorithm to not just score text, but then correct it.” Text is given a score by the tool on a scale of 1 to 10, where 10 indicates strong bias. From product beta testing, patterns of online bias are already becoming apparent.
For example, an August post from Bluesky CEO Jay Graber was contrasted with language from an April post by Elon Musk, in which he expressed regret for using a disparaging term about Dustin Moskowitz. While Graber’s post received a score of 3.6 out of 10, or “Low Bias,” Musk’s received a score of 6.8, or “High Bias.”
The following is the “fix” that Latimer’s technology suggested for Musk’s post: “I apologise to Dustin Moskowitz for my previous inappropriate comment.It was incorrect. I wanted to say that I think he has an extremely self-important attitude. I hope we can move past this and potentially become friends in the future.” While what is deemed biased is subjective, Latimer isn’t alone in trying to tackle this challenge through technology. The LA Times plans to display a “bias meter” in 2025, for instance. Latimer hopes its bias tool will draw in more users. “This will help us identify a different set of users who might not use a large language model, but might use a browser extension,” Pasmore said. The bias detector will launch at $1 a month, and a pro version will let users access multiple bias detection algorithms.