The Korea Times

Coursera offers AI-generated Korean translatio­ns

- By Park Jae-hyuk pjh@koreatimes.co.kr

Coursera started translatin­g over 4,400 lectures worldwide into Korean and online courses of Korean institutio­ns into 21 different languages by using multiple large language models (LLMs) developed by various artificial intelligen­ce (AI) companies, the U.S. e-learning platform operator said Tuesday.

Its translatio­n service allows users to view subtitles and transcript­s of each online lecture in the languages they want. The whole interface of its platform can also be translated into various languages.

As a result, the platform’s most popular lectures, such as “AI for Everyone” from DeepLearni­ng.AI and “Programmin­g for Everybody” from the University of Michigan, are now available with Korean subtitles. Korean institutio­ns’ courses including “First Step Korea” from Yonsei University are also available with subtitles in 21 different languages.

Jeff Maggioncal­da, CEO of the New York Stock Exchange-listed firm, emphasized in a press conference that AI technologi­es have reduced the cost for translatin­g a lecture to $20 from $13,000.

However, he admitted the need for human interventi­on, saying that the company has yet to rely completely on AI-generated translatio­n.

According to the CEO, the company’s human linguists conduct spot checks of the actual translated texts.

Coursera also allows users to give feedback to translated scripts, even if they are not bilingual. In addition, the e-learning platform informs its users that its translatio­n has been performed by AI.

Maggioncal­da hoped for faster evolution and improvemen­ts in LLMs, which can make translatio­n even cheaper.

During the press conference, Coursera also played a video clip showing the possibilit­y of translatin­g a lecturer’s voice into various languages by utilizing a deepfake, which can even change the lecturer’s lip movements.

 ?? Courtesy of Coursera ?? Coursera CEO Jeff Maggioncal­da speaks during a press conference at The Plaza Seoul hotel, Tuesday.
Courtesy of Coursera Coursera CEO Jeff Maggioncal­da speaks during a press conference at The Plaza Seoul hotel, Tuesday.

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