Now more than six months since ChatGPT seemingly captured the
world’s attention, talk of generative artificial intelligence continues to
straddle the two extremes of enthusiasm and angst.
On Tuesday, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman urged lawmakers in the United
States to regulate AI, and several other countries around
the world are considering the same.
Meanwhile, across the travel industry, generative AI is at the top
of the to-do list for companies of all types, from online
travel agencies to global
distribution systems and brands across every sector.
Just last week MakeMyTrip
announced a partnership with Microsoft to use OpenAI’s technology to summarize hotel reviews and enable voice-assisted travel
bookings in multiple languages. And HomeToGo
launched “AI Mode,” which returns recommended vacation rentals based on users’
text inputs describing their needs.
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As research and development continues at pace, expect to see more
complex integrations of this technology by travel brands as they use it to
create more personalized, frictionless shopping and booking experiences.
But what guardrails are needed if both companies and
individuals want to share their personal or proprietary data with these types
of AI systems?
To
explore this topic, PhocusWire convened its third LinkedIn Audio event
Thursday, “Let’s Hear It! Seamless but secure: ChatGPT and data protection in
travel.”
Speakers
for the event were Patrick Surry, chief data scientist at Hopper; Sanjay Mohan,
group CTO at MakeMyTrip; and Trevor Butterworth, co-founder and chief of
governance at Indicio.
During
the 45-minute discussion, they discussed the potential for regulation, the
different needs of integrations within a company’s ecosystem versus across
organizational boundaries and the importance of focusing on the customer to
determine use cases.
“There’s
this danger that we see it as this magical tool that we can look for problems
to solve rather than coming from our customer and saying what is it that’s bad
about our travel experience today, what is it that we can improve about the apps
and how can we potentially use this or other technologies to help solve,” Surry
said.
And
along with rightful concerns about generative AI, Mohan expressed optimism
about the way it can be used for positive outcomes, such as making travel more
accessible and inclusive.
“And
mature and responsible companies will take very deliberate, considered and
measured steps as they unleash and unlock the potential of these offerings,”
Mohan said.
Listen
to the entire episode of “Let’s Hear It” below.
00:00 Opening and introductions
6:30 – Patrick on what Hopper is doing with generative AI
8:15 – Sanjay on what MakeMyTrip is doing with generative AI
12:15 – Trevor on digital travel credentials
15:30 – Sanjay how MakeMyTrip is managing personal data with
generative AI
16:30 – Trevor on importance of GDPR compliance as a first
step
18:00 – Patrick on “chain of custody” of data and implicit
bias in models
21:45 – question from Jonathan Sutter, senior director of
the travel industry practice at J.D. Power
26:00 – Patrick on working backward from customer problems
27:20 – Sanjay on the difference between moving fast and
being reckless
31:00 – Patrick on the importance of providing trusted information
34:00 – Trevor on the role of verifiable credentials
37:30 – Patrick on verified and authoritative data sources
40:45 – comment from Riaan van Schoor, CEO of Agentivity
41:45 – closing comments and predictions
Phocuswright Europe 2023
Generative AI is set to revolutionize travel. Leaders from
Trip.com, Microsoft and Kayak tell us how the technology will change everything from the back of the house to the front.