Cape Breton Post

People problems

Google’s artificial intelligen­ce push comes with plenty of human-related issues

- BY RYAN NAKASHIMA

Google CEO Sundar Pichai recently declared that artificial intelligen­ce fueled by powerful computers was more important to humanity than fire or electricit­y. And yet the search giant increasing­ly faces a variety of messy people problems as well.

The company has vowed to employ thousands of human checkers just to catch rogue YouTube posters, Russian bots and other purveyors of unsavoury content. It’s also on a buying spree to find office space for its burgeoning workforce in pricey Silicon Valley.

For a company that built its success on using faceless algorithms to automate many human tasks, this focus on people presents something of a conundrum. Yet it’s also a necessary one as lawmakers ramp up the pressure on Google to deter foreign powers from abusing its platforms and its YouTube unit draws fire for offensive videos , particular­ly ones aimed at younger audiences.

In the latest quarter alone, Google parent Alphabet Inc. added 2,009 workers, for a total of 80,110. Over the last three years, it hired a net 2,245 people per quarter on average. That’s nearly 173 per week, or 25 people per day.

Some of the extra workers this year will be part of Google’s pledge to have 10,000 people across the company snooping out videos and other material that violate the company’s policies - but which computers can’t catch on their own. That program will lead to what Google calls “significan­t growth ” in personnel.

Google will take on even more workers in the current quarter now that it has closed its $1.1 billion purchase of part of hardware maker HTC, bringing onboard the 2,000-plus engineers who worked on the Pixel smartphone line.

On Thursday, Pichai spoke bullishly about content-checkers hiring, saying the investment­s now set the company up to capture growth in the future - in the same call with investors that he touted self-driving vehicles developed by Alphabet’s Waymo unit, which aim to do away with human drivers entirely.

For instance, Pichai said he sees consumers increasing­ly watching YouTube videos on connected TVs in the living room, a lucrative segment of growth for the digital video advertisin­g that helps power Google’s growth.

After controvers­ies over YouTube stars who made anti-Semitic comments or showed video of someone who had apparently died by suicide, Google has tightened its standards . It has limited which YouTube channels can serve up ads; vowed to manually review every video in its most popular channels for 18-to-34-year-olds; and will pay outside companies to ensure that brands don’t have their ads turn up next to unsuitable videos.

“While there have been some concerns, we’re working really hard to address them and respond strongly,” Pichai said.

Some analysts aren’t so sure. Collin Colburn, an analyst with market researcher Forrester, wonders how much of the recent changes are just window dressing at a company for whom hiring thousands of people amounts to little more than pocket change.

“I wonder if it’s more of a move of optics rather than practicali­ty,” Colburn said, noting Google’s “massive” doubledigi­t revenue growth and cash hoard of $102 billion.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this Oct. 4, 2016, file photo, Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks during a product event in San Francisco. Pichai has declared artificial intelligen­ce more important to humanity than fire or electricit­y.
AP PHOTO In this Oct. 4, 2016, file photo, Google CEO Sundar Pichai speaks during a product event in San Francisco. Pichai has declared artificial intelligen­ce more important to humanity than fire or electricit­y.

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