'Robot lawyer' fights parking tickets

A chatbot programmed by a British teenager has successfully challenged 160,000 parking tickets since its launch last year.About 250,000 people have used the free service so far, said its creator, Joshua Browder.The Do Not Pay bot c
urrently works in the UK and New York in the US. It asks a series of questions to determine the validity of a penalty notice.It can also be used to work out compensation for delayed flights.Mr Browder told the BBC he hoped it proved bots could be useful."Bots are a huge opportunity for public service," he said."I'm very surprised it has been so successful, but I am not surprised that so many people have pushed back against their parking tickets."Of the 160,000 successful challenges, 9,000 were from New York, where the bot launched in March 2016,reports Venture Beat.Mr Browder was inspired to build the bot, which he describes as"the world's first robot lawyer", after receiving "countless" parking tickets himself.It took him three months to program.The Stanford University student is currently building a new bot aimed at helping Syrian refugees by producing English documentsbased on Arabic text.However, Abhi Chirimar, the chief executive of online mental health community Instawell, said that in his experience there was no chatbot "silver bullet" for companies offering digital services across more than one platform."Service developers need to be mindful of the pros and cons when designing chatbots," he said."Chatbots need tactical conversation design to ensure that the average person feels comfortable throughout the process."We realised early on that there isn't an easy 'silver-bullet' for ourchatbot."Now, a Facebook user and a Slack user are served up differentchatbots for the same goal - get the right kind of help."

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