Reposting my comment on "I just bought a 2024 Chevy Tahoe for $1" [1]:<p>This comment and many of the replies seem to outright dismiss chatbots as universally useless, but there's selection bias at work. Of course the average HN commenter would (claim to) have a nuanced situation that can only be handled by a human representative, but the majority of customer service interactions can be handled much more routinely.<p>Bits About Money [2] has a thoughtful take on customer support tiers from the perspective of banking:<p>> Think of the person from your grade school classes who had the most difficulty at everything. The U.S. expects banks to service people much, much less intelligent than them. Some customers do not understand why a $45 charge and a $32 charge would overdraw an account with $70 in it. The bank will not be more effective at educating them on this than the public school system was given a budget of $100,000 and 12 years to try. This customer calls the bank much more frequently than you do. You can understand why, right? From their perspective, they were just going about their life, doing nothing wrong, and then for some bullshit reason the bank charged them $35.<p>It's frustrating to be put through a gauntlet of chatbots and phone menus when you absolutely know you need a human to help, but that's the economics of chatbots and tier 1/2 support versus specialists:<p>> The reason you have to “jump through hoops” to “simply talk to someone” (a professional, with meaningful decisionmaking authority) is because the system is set up to a) try to dissuade that guy from speaking to someone whose time is expensive and b) believes, on the basis of voluminous evidence, that you are likely that guy until proven otherwise.<p>Yes, I agree that when I absolutely need to speak to a human, it's infuriating to no end. But everyone's collective "absolutely need to speak to a human" bar is higher than it may need to be.<p>[1] <a href="https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38681450">https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38681450</a><p>[2] <a href="https://www.bitsaboutmoney.com/archive/seeing-like-a-bank/" rel="nofollow">https://www.bitsaboutmoney.com/archive/seeing-like-a-bank/</a>