Toronto Star

GOOGLE’S AI RACE

As advertiser­s boycott YouTube over offensive videos, search giant has its work cut out,

- MARK BERGEN BLOOMBERG

SAN FRANCISCO— An advertiser boycott of YouTube is testing a critical and much-hyped part of Google’s future: its prowess in artificial intelligen­ce. Some experts in the field say the technology isn’t up to scratch yet, but that if any company can solve the problem at hand, it’s the online search giant.

Some of the world’s biggest marketers halted YouTube spending this month after ads from large brands were found running alongside hateful and extremist videos. Google parent Alphabet Inc. risks losing $930 million (U.S.) in revenue this year from the debacle, analysts at Nomura Instinet estimated this week.

That’s less than 1 percent of projected sales this year, so it can weather the financial storm. But it’s likely an incentive for the company to redirect AI investment­s and accelerate research efforts already underway.

To detect and police content across YouTube’s sprawling library, and ensure ads don’t run against questionab­le content, Google must solve an AI problem no one has cracked yet: automatica­lly understand­ing everything that’s going on in videos, including gesticulat­ions and other human nuances.

Apotential solution lies in machine learning, a powerful AI technique for automatica­lly recognizin­g patterns across reams of data — a Google specialty. Chief executive officer Sundar Pichai has pledged to infuse the technology across all its products and the company touts its abilities in the field to software developers, cloudcompu­ting clients, advertiser­s and shareholde­rs.

Computer scientists doubt technology alone can expunge offensive videos. “We’re not there yet where we can, say, find all extremist content,” said Hany Farid, a Dartmouth professor and senior adviser to the Counter Extremism Project, which has repeatedly called on YouTube to tackle this problem. He recommends companies such as Google and Facebook deploy more human editors to filter content. “Machine learning, AI is nowhere near that yet. Don’t believe the hype.”

“A video is three dimensiona­l, with two dimensions in space and an additional dimension in time. It’s a challenge.” JIEBO LUO AI EXPERT

The AI hype machine is running at full speed in Silicon Valley right now, as startups and technology giants such as Google, Amazon and Microsoft compete to recruit engineers and scientists skilled in the field.

Google’s AI advances sometimes match the hype, but they are not perfect. The company’s cloud division recently released a tool (unrelated to YouTube) that breaks videos into their constituen­t parts, rendering them “searchable and discoverab­le.” A group of academics published research earlier this week that showed how to deceive this system by injecting images into videos.

Google has used machine learning and other AI tools to master speech, text and image recognitio­n. In 2012, researcher­s famously got a network of 16,000 computers to teach itself to recognize cats by scanning millions of still images culled from YouTube videos. Understand­ing entire videos is a lot more difficult. Cats meow, stretch and jump through more than a thousand video frames each minute.

“A video is three dimensiona­l, with two dimensions in space and an additional dimension in time,” said Jiebo Luo, an AI expert at the University of Rochester, who has created text-based hate-speech filters for social media such as Twitter. “It’s a challenge.”

Particular­ly so for something as big as YouTube. It said in 2015 that people uploaded 300 hours of content per minute to the service, making it impossible to screen all videos as they appear.

Two years have passed, so could software now evolve to a point where it dissects every video uploaded on- line, decipherin­g the vile from the rest? “It’s possible,” Luo said, “especially given the massive computatio­nal and people resources that Google has. No other company is in a better position to do that.”

Still, it’s not cheap. Video demands advanced algorithms and computing horsepower. Today, the industry relies on specialize­d semiconduc­tors, called graphic processing units, to drive the software.

Processing an hour of video typically occupies half the resources of a GPU, said Reza Zadeh, founder of Matroid, an AI startup working on video. A graphics card featuring a high-end chip from market leader Nvidia Corp. sells for about $500. “The best models are expensive right now,” Zadeh said.

Google spends billions of dollars a year on data centres, computer servers and the chips that run them. It doesn’t say how much of this goes toward YouTube, but the video site is known to be expensive to run.

In AI, Google has even developed its own hardware, called Tensor Flow Processing Units (TPUs). It recently offered a $30,000 prize for researcher­s to use its cloud and TPUs, or similar AI tools, to accurately label YouTube videos. Google researcher­s have applied machine learning software to classify images and audio inside videos for years (is that video tagged as a Prince song really Prince?), while improving recommenda­tions and ad performanc­e.

Another part of Alphabet — a group called Jigsaw — is using AI tools in other ways to curb hate speech online. In a memo to aggrieved YouTube advertiser­s last week, the company said its machine learning algorithms will improve the precision and classifica­tion of videos. However, it also warned that with the volume of content involved, this can never be 100-per-cent guaranteed.

Classifyin­g what we hear and watch online, together at once, “is a problem that is essentiall­y open,” Zadeh said. “Probably, Google is doing it right now.”

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Google CEO Sundar Pichai has pledged to infuse all its products with a powerful AI technique to automatica­lly find and filter questionab­le content.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Google CEO Sundar Pichai has pledged to infuse all its products with a powerful AI technique to automatica­lly find and filter questionab­le content.

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