At one call center in the Philippines, workers help Americans with diabetes or neurological conditions troubleshoot devices that monitor their health. Sometimes they get pressing calls: elderly patients who are alone and experiencing a medical emergency.

  • Vanth@reddthat.com
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    23 hours ago

    I coached my grandma to just repeat “I want to talk to a human operator, please” over and over until she got through. It worked about 70% of the time but some are nearly impenetrable.

    • TVA@thebrainbin.org
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      1 hour ago

      I called Comcast and it was horrible

      human, operator, GET HUMAN, person, technician, for fucks sake! Bomb? Give me a fucking human!

      Nope, nothin, mashing 0 on the keypad also did nothing.

  • toastmeister@lemmy.ca
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    20 hours ago

    Its either this or people in India. Once one company does it the price of that good falls and the CPI prints more money entrenching the shrinkflation.

  • VagueAnodyneComments@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    23 hours ago

    They literally tried this last time and called it “AI.” They used Siri clones to replace receptionists but they sucked and that’s why call centers became the norm.

    • reiterationstation@lemm.ee
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      12 hours ago

      Hmmm years back they were using mturk and underpaying for a bit.

      But the ai is good for like 95% of questions people ask.

      • VagueAnodyneComments@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        9 hours ago

        Buddy if you want to talk to an AI be my guest but don’t act like 19/20 people find them useful as phone receptionists unless you are going to post a detailed study to that effect. 👍