Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Google’s AI is getting so good it may soon teach you foreign languages

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The AI tool will be accessible via Google Search.

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What you need to know

  • Google is reportedly working on a new AI-powered service that will help people learn foreign languages through Google Search.
  • The project is called Tivoli internally.
  • It is expected to be rolled out before the end of the year.

Google is working on a new project to teach people foreign languages through Google Search, according to an exclusive report from The Information. The project, which is said to be called Tivoli internally, could launch later this year.

The service will initially work over text, but the team behind the project is working on ways to add the functionality to Google Assistant and YouTube. In YouTube, Tivoli could create language quizzes, where users would be able to record themselves after watching a video. Google’s AI would then assess how they performed to help them improve.

Employees working on the project are hopeful that the more conversational AI will make it easier for learners to grasp new languages and also expand their earning potential “by making them eligible for new jobs.”

Tivoli’s development reportedly started two years back using Google’s Meena neural conversation model, which has since evolved into LaMDA. As announced by Google at I/O 2021, LaMDA will also enable the Google Assistant to have more free-flowing conversations with users in the future.

A large number of people already use Google Search to translate text from one language to another. This, coupled with Google’s search dominance, has reportedly raised concern among a few executives that the project could end up creating a new antitrust problem for the company.

With Tivoli, Google will be taking on the best language learning apps, which make learning a new language feel like you’re playing a game. Duolingo is currently the most popular language learning app, with over 500 million users.

Just last month, Google was fined €100 million by Italy’s competition watchdog for abusing its market dominance. U.S. lawmakers also introduced new antitrust bills earlier this month to weaken the dominance of Big Tech.

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