With an emphasis that Artificial Intelligence is safe and ready for use in the corporate realm, Google has unveiled a host of updates to its AI offerings for cloud computing customers. At the company’s annual cloud computing conference in Las Vegas, Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian showed off how Google’s most powerful AI model, Gemini, can be used to create advertisements, ward off cybersecurity threats and spin up short videos and podcasts.
Kurian further said that corporate customers will be able to peg Gemini’s query responses to reliable sources of information, known as grounding. The company is also rolling out the use of Google search results as a source for the AI model’s answers, thereby providing greater accuracy and freshness.
“Enterprises have been piloting with us a number of scenarios with generative AI; now they’re deploying them in production,” Kurian said. “The capabilities to do things like grounding, improving correctness of answers — all of those, step by step, people have gotten comfortable, they’re seeing value, and they’re deploying as a result.”
Google, a unit of Alphabet Inc., comes behind Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp. in cloud computing, but the market is one of the tech giant’s best bets for growth as its core search advertising business matures. Google reported the first full year of profitability at its cloud unit in 2023 and hopes to use its prowess in AI to close the gap with rivals.
Google and its cloud competitors see 2024 as the year the technology conquers the corporate world.
The race among the tech powerhouses is on, with Google’s chief rival in artificial intelligence, the Microsoft-backed startup OpenAI, also courting corporate customers. OpenAI now has more than 600,000 people signed up to use ChatGPT Enterprise, up from around 150,000 in January, Chief Operating Officer Brad Lightcap said last week.
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