Amazon introduces advanced AI chatbot Q aims to elevate user experience
Amazon AI-powered chatbot named Q is set to undertake diverse tasks including uploading documents
Amazon has unveiled its latest innovation—an AI-powered chatbot named Q designed for business purposes on Tuesday.
Exclusive to Amazon's AWS cloud computing clientele, the chatbot Q is set to enter a competitive arena, challenging counterparts such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Bard, and Microsoft's copilots—each utilizing OpenAI's cutting-edge technology.
Business-focused chatbots have emerged as the primary arena for generative AI, marking a pivotal year following the global acclaim of ChatGPT for its remarkable ability to generate expert and human-like content in real-time.
Priced at $20 per user on a monthly basis, Amazon Q is set to undertake diverse tasks, such as condensing uploaded documents and responding to inquiries related to specific data housed on a company's servers.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy highlighted Amazon Q as a heightened security iteration of an AI chatbot, emphasizing a more stringent control over access to content.
This strategic approach aims to instill confidence in companies that may have reservations about the technology's proclivity for generating inaccurate or inappropriate responses, often referred to as hallucinations.
Jassy posted on X (former Twitter), “If a user doesn’t have permission to access certain data without Amazon Q, they can’t access it using Amazon Q either.”
Priced at $20 per user on a monthly basis, Amazon Q is set to undertake diverse tasks, such as condensing uploaded documents and responding to inquiries related to specific data housed on a company's servers.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy highlighted Amazon Q as a heightened security iteration of an AI chatbot, emphasizing a more stringent control over access to content.
This strategic approach aims to instill confidence in companies that may have reservations about the technology's proclivity for generating inaccurate or inappropriate responses, often referred to as hallucinations.