See the Social Security AI training video


Among the chaos and turmoil in the Social Security Office (SSA) due to the so -called Foreign Ministry’s efficiency (DOGE), employees have now been urged to integrate the use of a productive AI chat in their daily work.

But before each of them can use it, they all need to watch a four -minute training film, including a moving woman and a four -finger that is brutally drawn to a style that doesn’t look on the websites created early in the century.

Aside from web graphics 1.0, this film also to inform SSA staff about one of the most important aspects of ChatBot use: Do not use any identifiable personal information (PII) when using an assistant.

There is no problem with your speakers. Wired has disabled the sound. Through SSA

“Our apologies for monitoring in our training video,” SSA said in a legal sheet about your chat that was shared in an email last week. The legal tab, which Wired has reviewed, adds that employees should use PII to ChatBot using ChatBot. “

Working at the ChatBot, called the Mobile Support Agency, began about a year before, before the Musk or DOGE arrival to the agency, one of the SSA employees knows about the development of the program to the Wired. The program has been in limited testing since February before it was transferred to all SSA employees last week.

In an email that has been announced this week to all employees, and reviewed by Wired, the agency wrote that this ChatBot “was designed to help employees in everyday work and enhance productivity”.

Several SSA employees, including the front office staff, tell the Wired that they completely ignored email about chat because they were very busy work and reduced dividends in SSA offices. Others said they had briefly tested your chat but were not impressed immediately.

One source tells Wired, “Honestly, no one has really talked about it.” “I am not sure that most of my colleagues would even watch the training movie. I played a little with the chatbot and several answers I received from it were extremely vague and/or inaccurate.”

Another source said their colleagues were ridiculed by educational films.

“You can hear my colleagues who enjoy the graphics. No one knows [using it]Human beings are very clumsy and bad. “

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