Should handymen use AI to fix your electric outlets? New Mozilla project says yes!

cross-posted from: https://piefed.social/c/technology/p/1903357/should-handymen-use-ai-to-fix-your-electric-outlets-new-mozilla-project-says-yes

In an obscure post, a Mozilla MLE announced a ClawBot ripoff specifically targeted at at tradespeople (electricians, plumbers, roofers, handymen) for help with administrative tasks like scheduling, explaining invoices, etc.

What is their project, ClawBolt? According to their website, it’s a compilation of

  • A flaky AI agent you run on your computer
  • A Telegram chatbot to remotely control it
  • A connection to OpenAI to parse all of it

This sounds like a dangerous project to target at tradesmen, doesn’t it? AI marketing tells people that AI is smart and safe and powerful when it is anything but. If Facebook’s top AI safety genius nearly destroyed her own email inbox, how will a plumber fare?

One of the features of ClawBolt is “memory,” something that will store and possibly corrupt questions and answers like “What’s Mrs. Johnson’s address?” and “My hourly rate is $95”.

But it gets worse: ClawBolt documentation says it can scan images to “get help identifying fixtures

Remember the memes making fun of AI’s inability to make wiring diagrams?

I can only imagine how bad this could make things for tradespeople - in addition to violating customer privacy, getting gaslit by a non-deterministic “memory” machine, and potentially breaking their work computers.

Funny that you mention this now.

A few days ago we had to splice an euro plug into a US cable (we needed it urgently and the replacement was going to take too long to arrive). Once we had cut the cables we found out that the color schemes for the wires are different in the US than the EU, so a coworker asked chatgpt which wires he should connect together. Long story short, the fuses got tested that day, and not intentionally. He ended up connecting live to ground.