Bangkok Post

Google enters Bard in AI chatbot race

- NICO GRANT CADE METZ

For more than three months, Google executives have watched as projects at Microsoft and a San Francisco start-up called OpenAI have stoked the public’s imaginatio­n with the potential for artificial intelligen­ce.

But on Tuesday, Google tentativel­y stepped off the sidelines as it released a chatbot called Bard. The new AI chatbot will be available to a limited number of users in the United States and Britain and will accommodat­e additional users, countries and languages over time, Google executives said in an interview.

The cautious rollout is the company’s first public effort to address the recent chatbot craze driven by OpenAI and Microsoft, and it is meant to demonstrat­e that Google is capable of providing similar technology. But Google is taking a much more cautious approach than its competitor­s, which have faced criticism that they are proliferat­ing an unpredicta­ble and sometimes untrustwor­thy technology.

Still, the release represents a significan­t step to stave off a threat to Google’s most lucrative business, its search engine. Many in the tech industry believe that Google — more than any other big tech company — has a lot to lose and to gain from AI, which could help a range of Google products become more useful, but could also help other companies cut into Google’s huge internet search business. A chatbot can instantly produce answers in complete sentences that don’t force people to scroll through a list of results, which is what a search engine would offer.

Google started Bard as a webpage on its own rather than a component of its search engine, beginning a tricky dance of adopting new AI while preserving one of the tech industry’s most profitable businesses.

“It’s important that Google start to play in this space because this is where the world is headed,” said Adrian Aoun, a former Google director of special projects. But the move to chatbots could help upend a business model reliant on advertisin­g, said Aoun, who is now the chief executive of the health care start-up Forward.

In late November, OpenAI released ChatGPT, an online chatbot that can answer questions, write term papers and riff on almost any topic. Two months later, the company’s primary investor and partner, Microsoft, added a similar chatbot to its Bing internet search engine, showing how the technology could shift the market Google has dominated for more than 20 years.

Google has been racing to ship AI products since December. It declared a “code red” in response to ChatGPT’s release, making AI the company’s central priority. And it spurred teams inside the company, including researcher­s who specialise in studying the safety of AI, to collaborat­e to speed up the approval of a wave of new products.

Last week, OpenAI tried to up the ante with newer technology called GPT-4, which will allow other businesses to build the kind of artificial intelligen­ce that powers ChatGPT into a variety of products, including business software and e-commerce websites.

Google has been testing the technology underlying Bard since 2015, but has so far not released it beyond a small group of early testers because, like the chatbots offered by OpenAI and Microsoft, it does not always generate trustworth­y informatio­n and can show bias against women and people of colour.

“We are well aware of the issues; we need to bring this to market responsibl­y,” said Eli Collins, Google’s vice president for research. “At the same time, we see all the excitement in the industry and the excitement of all the people using generative AI.” Collins and Sissie Hsiao, a Google vice president for product, said that the company had not yet determined a way to make money from Bard.

Google announced last week that AI was coming to its productivi­ty apps like Docs and Sheets, which businesses pay to use. The underlying technology will also be on sale to companies and software developers who wish to build their own chatbots or power new apps.

“It is early days for the technology,” Hsiao said. “We’re exploring how these experience­s can show up in different products.”

The recent announceme­nts are the beginning of Google’s plan to introduce more than 20 AI products and features, The New York Times has reported, including a feature called Shopping Try-on and the ability to create custom background images for YouTube videos and Pixel phones.

Rather than being combined with its search engine, Bard is a stand-alone webpage featuring a question box. At the bottom of an answer there is a button to “Google it,” which takes users to a new tab with a convention­al Google search results page on the topic.

Google executives pitched Bard as a creative tool designed to draft emails and poems and offer guidance on how to get children involved in new hobbies like fly-fishing. The company is keen to see how people use the technology, and will further refine the chatbot based on use and feedback, the executives said. Unlike its search engine, though, Bard was not primarily designed to be a source of reliable informatio­n.

“We think of Bard as complement­ary to Google Search,” Hsiao said. “We want to be bold in how we innovate with this technology as well as be responsibl­e.”

 ?? AFP ?? The logo of Google at an exhibition in Barcelona on Jan 31.
AFP The logo of Google at an exhibition in Barcelona on Jan 31.

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