San Diego Union-Tribune

GOOGLE LAUNCHES GEMINI AI MODEL

More powerful version of Bard chatbot released with the new technology

- BY MICHAEL LIEDTKE & MATT O’BRIEN

Google took its next leap in artificial intelligen­ce Wednesday with the launch of project Gemini, an AI model trained to behave in humanlike ways that’s likely to intensify the debate about the technology’s potential promise and perils.

The rollout will unfold in phases, with less sophistica­ted versions of Gemini called Nano and Pro being immediatel­y incorporat­ed into Google’s AI-powered chatbot Bard and its Pixel 8 Pro smartphone.

With Gemini providing a helping hand, Google promises Bard will become more intuitive and better at tasks that involve planning. On the Pixel 8 Pro, Gemini will be able to quickly summarize recordings made on the device and provide automatic replies on messaging services, starting with WhatsApp, Google said.

Gemini’s biggest advances won’t come until early next year when its Ultra model will be used to launch Bard Advanced, a juiced-up version of the chatbot that initially will only be offered to a test audience.

The AI, at first, will only work in English throughout the world, although Google executives assured reporters during a briefing that the technology will have no problem eventually diversifyi­ng into other languages.

Based on a demonstrat­ion of Gemini for a group of reporters, Bard Advanced might be capable of unpreceden­ted AI multitaski­ng by simultaneo­usly recognizin­g and understand­ing presentati­ons involving

text, photos and video.

Gemini will also eventually be infused into Google’s dominant search engine, although the timing of that transition hasn’t been spelled out yet.

“This is a significan­t milestone in the developmen­t of AI, and the start of a new era for us at Google,” declared Demis Hassabis, CEO of Google DeepMind, the AI division behind Gemini. Google prevailed over other bidders, including Facebook

parent Meta, to acquire London-based DeepMind nearly a decade ago, and since melded it with its “Brain” division to focus on Gemini’s developmen­t.

The technology’s problem-solving skills are being touted by Google as being especially adept in math and physics, fueling hopes among AI optimists that it may lead to scientific breakthrou­ghs that improve life for humans.

But an opposing side of the AI debate worries about the technology eventually eclipsing human intelligen­ce, resulting in the loss of millions of jobs and perhaps even more destructiv­e behavior, such as amplifying misinforma­tion or triggering the deployment of nuclear weapons.

“We’re approachin­g this work boldly and responsibl­y,” Google CEO Sundar Pichai wrote in a blog post. “That means being ambitious in our research and pursuing the capabiliti­es that will bring enormous benefits to people and society, while building in safeguards and working collaborat­ively with government­s and experts to address risks as AI becomes more capable.”

Gemini’s arrival is likely to up the ante in an AI competitio­n that has been escalating for the past year, with San Francisco startup OpenAI and longtime rival Microsoft.

Backed by Microsoft’s financial muscle and computing power, OpenAI was already deep into developing its most advanced AI model, GPT-4, when it released the free ChatGPT tool late last year. That AI-fueled chatbot rocketed to global fame, bringing buzz to the commercial promise of generative AI and pressuring Google to push out Bard in response.

Just as Bard was arriving on the scene, OpenAI released GPT-4 in March and has since been building in new capabiliti­es aimed at consumers and business customers, including a feature unveiled in November that

enables the chatbot to analyze images. It’s been competing for business against other rival AI startups such as Anthropic and even its partner, Microsoft, which has exclusive rights to OpenAI’s technology in exchange for the billions of dollars that it has poured into the startup.

The alliance so far has been a boon for Microsoft, which has seen its market value climb by more than 50 percent so far this year, primarily because of investors’ belief that AI will turn into a gold mine for the tech industry. Google’s corporate parent, Alphabet, also has been riding the same wave with its market value rising more than $500 billion, or about 45 percent, so far this year. Despite the anticipati­on surroundin­g

Gemini in recent months, Alphabet’s stock edged down slightly in trading Wednesday.

Microsoft’s deepening involvemen­t in OpenAI during the past year, coupled with OpenAI’s more aggressive attempts to commercial­ize its products, has raised concerns that the nonprofit has strayed from its original mission to protect humanity as the technology progresses.

Those worries were magnified last month when OpenAI’s board abruptly fired CEO Sam Altman in a dispute revolving around undisclose­d issues of trust. After backlash that threatened to destroy the company and result in a mass exodus of AI engineerin­g talent to Microsoft, OpenAI brought

Altman back as CEO and reshuffled its board.

With Gemini coming out, OpenAI may find itself trying to prove its technology remains smarter than Google’s.

“I am in awe of what it’s capable of,” Google DeepMind vice president of product Eli Collins said of Gemini.

In a virtual news conference, Google declined to share Gemini’s parameter count — one but not the only measure of a model’s complexity. A white paper released Wednesday outlined the most capable version of Gemini outperform­ing GPT-4 on multiple-choice exams, grade-school math and other benchmarks.

 ?? JASON ANDREW NYT FILE ?? Google CEO Sundar Pichai discusses artificial intelligen­ce initiative­s at an annual conference in Mountain View in May.
JASON ANDREW NYT FILE Google CEO Sundar Pichai discusses artificial intelligen­ce initiative­s at an annual conference in Mountain View in May.

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