The Mercury News Weekend

Google aims to use AI tech to handle angry customers

Products increase competitio­n with Microsoft, Amazon

- By Jack Clark

Google is trying to use its artificial intelligen­ce knowhow to tempt businesses onto its cloud and away from dominant services run by Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp. The latest lure: use Google computers to automatica­lly handle irate customer calls.

The Alphabet Inc. unit announced two new artificial intelligen­ce software tools Wednesday for its Google Cloud Platform service and made another of its many data centers available to rent by outside companies.

The moves are part of a broader push by Google to use its lead in AI technology to improve existing services and products, develop new ones and ultimately build new businesses. It recently used cutting-edge AI developed by its DeepMind subsidiary to improve the efficiency of its data centers.

The products introduced Wednesday also increase competitio­n with Microsoft, which is making AI tools available via its Azure cloud, and set Google apart from Amazon Web Services, which has focused on letting customers program their own AI tools.

Google’s two new AI tools let companies ana- lyze language and convert speech into text. U.K.-based grocery delivery service Ocado Group Plc has used them to help it rank and respond to customer queries, the internet company said.

Businesses can use the technologi­es to automatica­lly “prioritize the most irate customers first” by spotting language from emails and phone calls associated with feelings like anger, frustratio­n and irritation, said Rob Craft, a product manager for Google Cloud Platform.

The products will cost a few cents per use, he said. The company expects people to mix and match its various AI offerings. For example, a business could transcribe a phone call using the speech service, in- terpret the tone of it, and figure out which product the call relates to, no human required.

The current emphasis of Google’s AI services is to help automate aspects of conversati­ons, said Craft. In the future, he thinks interestin­g work could be done in fraud prevention and cybersecur­ity for other companies.

The company also announced that customers can now rent storage, computing power and other cloud services from its data center in Oregon, giving people on the West Coast of the U.S. faster access. That’s part of a plan by cloud chief and board member Diane Greene to add 12 new data centers over the next 12 to 18 months.

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