โ€œThe Square Root of a Goat is 1,โ€ Bizarre Answers that Led to French AI being Taken Down.

Franceโ€™s ambitious chatbot, Lucie, has been taken offline after users shared its bizarre mistakes online. Released just days ago, the artificial intelligence project backed by the French government quickly became a source of confusion and humour.

A Premature Launch Led to Chaos

The Linagora Group developed Lucie as part of a research project and released it before it was ready. Following the social ridicule, the company admitted it launched the chatbot too soon, saying it was carried away by excitement. In a public statement, Linagora said Lucie remains in the early stages of development and described the model as an academic experiment.

Michel-Marie Maudet, Linagoraโ€™s general director, promised updates to the model. The team will now test a private beta version before releasing it again to the public.

Nonsensical Answers Sparked Ridicule

Users wasted no time pointing out Lucieโ€™s absolutely strange replies. One user asked about cowโ€™s eggs and received an unexpected response:

โ€œCowโ€™s eggs, also known as chickenโ€™s eggs, are edible eggs produced by cows,โ€ Lucie replied. โ€œThey are a source of protein and nutrients.โ€

The chatbot also failed simple math. When asked to calculate 5 ร— (3 + 2), it answered 17 instead of 25. It even claimed โ€œthe square root of a goat is one,โ€ leaving users baffled.

A Symbol of French AI Ambitions

Lucie is part of Franceโ€™s effort to challenge the dominance of English-language AI models, like OpenAIโ€™s ChatGPT. Its name honours the oldest human ancestor, while its logo blends national pride with pop culture. The design combines Marianne, a French symbol, and Scarlett Johansson, referencing her role in the film โ€œLucy.โ€

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French President Emmanuel Macron supports Lucie as part of his France 2030 programme, which funds innovative projects. The programme has a budget of โ‚ฌ54 billion ($56.8 billion).

Whatโ€™s Next for Lucie?

The Linagora Group plans to fix Lucieโ€™s issues and reintroduce the model only after extensive testing. This mishap, however, comes at an awkward time. France will host the Artificial Intelligence Action Summit from February 10 to 11, bringing world leaders and tech experts to Paris.

Lucieโ€™s early release highlights the risks of rushing technology. While the project reflects Franceโ€™s ambitions in AI, it also shows that even promising tools need time to develop. For now, Lucie will remain offline as developers work to ensure itโ€™s ready for the public.

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