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Chatbots: The silent bureaucrats of the digital age

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 What is a chatbot?

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A chatbot is an AI-based software program that can simulate a conversation with users in natural language through messaging applications, websites, mobile apps, or telephone. It is designed to automate communication and provide information or services without human intervention.

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How does a chatbot function?

Chatbots work using natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning (ML):

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Flowchart: Working of a chatbot

User Input (Text or Voice)

Natural language processing (NLP)

Intent recognition

Search knowledge base / generate response

Send output to user

(Optional) Learn and improve via feedback

Major chatbots – Examples, functions & limitations

ChatGPT (OpenAI): Answer questions, write essays, generate content but may give outdated info; lacks real-time awareness

Google Assistant (Google): Voice commands, reminders, searches, smart device control butrequires internet; privacy concerns

Alexa (Amazon): Home automation, shopping, entertainment but limited contextual memory; privacy issues

Siri (Apple): iOS integration, personal assistant but limited 3rd-party integration; accuracy issues

Cortana (Microsoft): Productivity support, MS Office integration but low user adoption; discontinued as standalone

Bard (Google, now part of Gemini): Real-time web-based answers, productivity tools but still under development; not fully reliable

Watson Assistant (IBM): Business automation, customer support but complex to set up; costly for small organisations

Role of chatbots in governance (Civil Services relevance)

Opportunities

Limitations

Conclusion

Chatbots have transformed public service delivery, enhancing efficiency and accessibility. However, civil servants must address ethical, linguistic, and technical gaps to ensure inclusive and secure use of this technology in governance.

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