Facebook’s Bot Engine lets you teach chatbots what to say with AI

At its F8 developer conference in San Francisco today, Facebook announced the beta launch of Bot Engine, a tool for teaching chatbots what to say in specific types of situations.

Bot Engine for Messenger.

Image Credit: Dean Takahashi/VentureBeat

The technology — which developers can use in association with the Send/Receive API for building Messenger bots that Facebook announcedearlier today — comes from Facebook Messenger’s Wit.ai team, said David Marcus, Facebook’s vice president of messaging.

The launch follows the rollout last yearof Facebook’s M personal digital assistant. Facebook pitched it as a technology that can be directed to do things on your behalf. The company has let just a few people use it since then.

“In the last six months we’ve learned a lot, and notably we needed to build a variety of small vertical bots to help resolve intent for people,” Marcus said.

Bot Engine relies on artificial intelligence. That is, developers will be able to feed it text and train it what to say in new situations. It will “continuously learn to get better over time,” Marcus wrote in a blog post.

Earlier this month Facebook saidthat Messenger has more than 900 million monthly active users. But Bot Engine can work with messaging apps other than Messenger, including Slack.

Find out more about Wit.ai’s new Bot Engine here.


More information:

Facebook is the world’s largest social network, with over 1.39 billion monthly active users. Facebook was founded by Mark Zuckerberg in February 2004, initially as an exclusive network for Harvard students. It was a huge hit: in 2 we... read more »

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