-
Venezuelan authorities move Machado ally to house arrest
-
YouTube rejects addiction claims in landmark social media trial
-
Google turns to century-long debt to build AI
-
'I felt guided by them': US skater Naumov remembers parents at Olympics
-
Till death do us bark: Brazilian state lets pets be buried with owners
-
'Confident' Pakistan ready for India blockbuster after USA win
-
Latam-GPT: a Latin American AI to combat US-centric bias
-
Gauff dumped out of Qatar Open, Swiatek, Rybakina through
-
Paris officers accused of beating black producer to stand trial in November
-
Istanbul bars rock bands accused of 'satanism'
-
Olympic bronze medal biathlete confesses affair on live TV
-
US commerce chief admits Epstein Island lunch but denies closer ties
-
Mayor of Ecuador's biggest city arrested for money laundering
-
Farhan, spinners lead Pakistan to easy USA win in T20 World Cup
-
Stocks mixed as muted US retail sales spur caution
-
Macron wants more EU joint borrowing: Could it happen?
-
Shiffrin flops at Winter Olympics as helmet row simmers
-
No excuses for Shiffrin after Olympic team combined flop
-
Pool on wheels brings swim lessons to rural France
-
Europe's Ariane 6 to launch Amazon constellation satellites into orbit
-
Could the digital euro get a green light in 2026?
-
Spain's Telefonica sells Chile unit in Latin America pullout
-
'We've lost everything': Colombia floods kill 22
-
Farhan propels Pakistan to 190-9 against USA in T20 World Cup
-
US to scrap cornerstone of climate regulation this week
-
Nepal call for India, England, Australia to play in Kathmandu
-
Stocks rise but lacklustre US retail sales spur caution
-
Olympic chiefs let Ukrainian athlete wear black armband at Olympics after helmet ban
-
French ice dancers poised for Winter Olympics gold amid turmoil
-
Norway's Ruud wins error-strewn Olympic freeski slopestyle
-
More Olympic pain for Shiffrin as Austria win team combined
-
Itoje returns to captain England for Scotland Six Nations clash
-
Sahara celebrates desert cultures at Chad festival
-
US retail sales flat in December as consumers pull back
-
Bumper potato harvests spell crisis for European farmers
-
Bangladesh's PM hopeful Rahman warns of 'huge' challenges ahead
-
Guardiola seeks solution to Man City's second half struggles
-
Shock on Senegalese campus after student dies during police clashes
-
US vice president Vance on peace bid in Azerbaijan after Armenia visit
-
'Everything is destroyed': Ukrainian power plant in ruins after Russian strike
-
Shiffrin misses out on Olympic combined medal as Austria win
-
EU lawmakers back plans for digital euro
-
Starmer says UK govt 'united', presses on amid Epstein fallout
-
Olympic chiefs offer repairs after medals break
-
Moscow chokes Telegram as it pushes state-backed rival app
-
ArcelorMittal confirms long-stalled French steel plant revamp
-
New Zealand set new T20 World Cup record partnership to crush UAE
-
Norway's Ruud wins Olympic freeski slopestyle gold after error-strewn event
-
USA's Johnson gets new gold medal after Olympic downhill award broke
-
Von Allmen aims for third gold in Olympic super-G
Google to release ChatGPT rival named Bard
Google said Monday it will release a conversational chatbot named Bard, setting up an artificial intelligence showdown with Microsoft which has invested billions in the creators of ChatGPT, the hugely popular language app that convincingly mimics human writing.
ChatGPT, created by San Francisco company OpenAI, has caused a sensation for its ability to write essays, poems or programming code on demand within seconds, sparking widespread fears of cheating or of entire professions becoming obsolete.
Microsoft announced last month that it was backing OpenAI and has begun to integrate ChatGPT features into its Teams platform, with expectations that it will adapt the app to its Office suite and Bing search engine.
The potential inclusion in Bing turned the focus on Google and speculation that the company's world-dominating search engine could face unprecedented competition from an AI-powered rival.
Media reports said the overnight success of ChatGPT was designated a "code red" threat at Google with founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page -- who left several years ago -- brought back to brainstorm ideas and fast-track a response.
The pressure to act was heightened by the poor earnings posted last week by Google-parent Alphabet, which fell short of investor expectations. The company last month announced that it was laying off 12,000 people as it put more emphasis on AI projects.
Google's announcement came on the eve of an AI-related launch event by Microsoft in yet a further sign that the two tech giants will do battle over the technology, also known as generative AI.
"Generative AI is a game changer and much like the rise of the internet sank the networking giants that came before (AOL, CompuServe etc.) it has the potential to change the competitive dynamic for search and information," said independent tech analyst Rob Enderle.
"Google still largely lives off the fact their search engine is the most widely used, this could change that, relegating them to history," he added.
- 'High-quality responses' -
In his blog post on Monday, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said that Google's Bard conversational AI was to go out for testing with a plan to make it more widely available "in the coming weeks."
Google's Bard is based on LaMDA, the firm's Language Model for Dialogue Applications system, and has been in development for several years.
"Bard seeks to combine the breadth of the world's knowledge with the power, intelligence, and creativity of our large language models," Pichai said.
"It draws on information from the web to provide fresh, high-quality responses," he added, hinting that the app would give up-to-the date responses, something ChatGPT is unable to do.
Before the emergence of ChatGPT, which was released in late November, Google had been reluctant to launch its own language-based AI fearing the reputational risk of releasing technology that wasn't ready.
Researchers using the same language models as Bard or ChatGPT have demonstrated the technology's ability to spew out misinformation or nonsense on a potentially massive scale.
Facebook-owner Meta in November was forced to take down the release of its own large language model called Galactica after three days when users shared its biased and incorrect results on social media within hours of its release.
Pichai insisted that responses churned out by Bard would "meet a high bar for quality, safety and groundedness in real world information."
And much like ChatGPT, Bard would source its responses from a limited version of its base language model in order to reduce computing power and reach a wider audience.
Crucially for its looming duel with Microsoft, Google also said that users would soon see AI-powered features in its search engine.
New-style responses would "distill complex information and multiple perspectives into easy-to-digest formats," Pichai said.
Search engines beefed up by generative AI "will give structured answers to questions and no longer links," Thierry Poibeau, of the CNRS research center in Paris, told AFP.
But bots like ChatGPT "also give wrong answers, which is annoying for a search engine," said Poibeau.
M.Thompson--AMWN