"A rival chatbot has shaken Google out of its routine, with
the founders who left three years ago re-engaging and more than 20 A.I.
projects in the works.
Last month, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Google’s founders,
held several meetings with company executives. The topic: a rival’s new
chatbot, a clever A.I. product that looked as if it could be the first notable
threat in decades to Google’s $149 billion search business.
Mr. Page and Mr. Brin, who had not spent much time at Google
since they left their daily roles with the company in 2019, reviewed Google’s
artificial intelligence product strategy, according to two people with
knowledge of the meetings who were not allowed to discuss them. They approved
plans and pitched ideas to put more chatbot features into Google’s search
engine. And they offered advice to company leaders, who have put A.I. front and
center in their plans.
The re-engagement of Google’s founders, at the invitation of
the company’s current chief executive, Sundar Pichai, emphasized the urgency
felt among many Google executives about artificial intelligence and that
chatbot, ChatGPT.
The bot, which was released by the small San Francisco
company OpenAI two months ago, amazed users by simply explaining complex
concepts and generating ideas from scratch. More important to Google, it looked
as if it could offer a new way to search for information on the internet.
The new A.I. technology has shaken Google out of its
routine. Mr. Pichai declared a “code red,” upending existing plans and
jump-starting A.I. development. Google now intends to unveil more than 20 new
products and demonstrate a version of its search engine with chatbot features
this year, according to a slide presentation reviewed by The New York Times and
two people with knowledge of the plans who were not authorized to discuss them.
At the same time, Alphabet is scaling back its work force.
On Friday, the company said it would cut about 12,000 jobs after a hiring spree
during the pandemic and amid concerns of a slowing economy. The layoffs were
designed “to ensure that our people and roles are aligned with our highest
priorities as a company,” Mr. Pichai wrote in a note to employees.
“This is a moment of significant vulnerability for Google,”
said D. Sivakumar, a former Google research director who helped found a
start-up called Tonita, which makes search technology for e-commerce companies.
“ChatGPT has put a stake in the ground, saying, ‘Here’s what a compelling new
search experience could look like.’” Mr. Sivakumar added that Google had
overcome previous challenges and could deploy its arsenal of A.I. to stay
competitive.
Since stepping back from day-to-day duties, Mr. Page and Mr.
Brin have taken a laissez-faire approach to Google, two people familiar with
the matter said. They have let Mr. Pichai run the company and its parent
company, Alphabet, while they have pursued other projects, such as flying car
start-ups and disaster relief efforts.
Their visits to the company’s Silicon Valley offices in the
last few years have mostly been to check in on the so-called moonshot projects
that Alphabet calls “Other Bets,” one person said. Until recently, they have not
been very involved with the search engine.
But they have long been keen on bringing A.I. into Google’s
products. Vic Gundotra, a former senior vice president at Google, recounted
that he gave Mr. Page a demonstration of a new Gmail feature around 2008. But
Mr. Page was unimpressed by the effort, asking, “Why can’t it automatically
write that email for you?” In 2014, Google also acquired DeepMind, a leading
A.I. research lab based in London.
Google’s Advanced Technology Review Council, a panel of
executives that includes Jeff Dean, the company’s senior vice president of
research and artificial intelligence, and Kent Walker, Google’s president of
global affairs and chief legal officer, met less than two weeks after ChatGPT
debuted to discuss their company’s initiatives, according to the slide
presentation.
They reviewed plans for products that were expected to debut
at Google’s company conference in May, including Image Generation Studio, which
creates and edits images, and a third version of A.I. Test Kitchen, an
experimental app for testing product prototypes.
Other image and video projects in the works included a
feature called Shopping Try-on, a YouTube green screen feature to create
backgrounds; a wallpaper maker for the Pixel smartphone; an application called
Maya that visualizes three-dimensional shoes; and a tool that could summarize
videos by generating a new one, according to the slides.
Google has a list of A.I. programs it plans to offer
software developers and other companies, including image-creation technology,
which could bolster revenue to Google’s Cloud division. There are also tools to
help other businesses create their own A.I. prototypes in internet browsers,
called MakerSuite, which will have two “Pro” versions, according to the presentation.
In May, Google also expects to announce a tool to make it
easier to build apps for Android smartphones, called Colab + Android Studio,
that will generate, complete and fix code, according to the presentation.
Another code generation and completion tool, called PaLM-Coder 2, has also been
in the works.
Google executives hope to reassert their company’s status as
a pioneer of A.I. The company aggressively worked on A.I. over the last decade
and already has offered to a small number of people a chatbot that could rival
ChatGPT, called LaMDA, or Language Model for Dialogue Applications.
“We continue to test our A.I. technology internally to make
sure it’s helpful and safe, and we look forward to sharing more experiences
externally soon,” Lily Lin, a spokeswoman for Google, said in a statement. She
added that A.I. would benefit individuals, businesses and communities and that
Google is considering the broader societal effects of the technology.
Google, OpenAI and others develop their A.I. with so-called
large language models that rely on online information, so they can sometimes
share false statements and show racist, sexist and other biased attitudes.
That had been enough to make companies cautious about
offering the technology to the public. But several new companies, including
You.com and Perplexity.ai, are already offering online search engines that let
you ask questions through an online chatbot, much like ChatGPT. Microsoft is
also working on a new version of its Bing search engine that would include
similar technology, according to a report from The Information.
Mr. Pichai has tried to accelerate product approval reviews,
according to the presentation reviewed by The Times. The company established a
fast-track review process called the “Green Lane” initiative, pushing groups of
employees who try to ensure that technology is fair and ethical to more quickly
approve its upcoming A.I. technology.
The company will also find ways for teams developing A.I. to
conduct their own reviews, and it will “recalibrate” the level of risk it is
willing to take when releasing the technology, according to the presentation.
The consequences of Google’s more streamlined approach are
not yet clear. Its technology has lagged OpenAI’s self-reported metrics when it
comes to identifying content that is hateful, toxic, sexual or violent,
according to an analysis that Google compiled. In each category, OpenAI bested
Google tools, which also fell short of human accuracy in assessing content.
Google listed copyright, privacy and antitrust as the
primary risks of the technology in the slide presentation. It said that
actions, such as filtering answers to weed out copyrighted material and
stopping A.I. from sharing personally identifiable information, are needed to
reduce those risks.
For the chatbot search demonstration that Google plans for
this year, getting facts right, ensuring safety and getting rid of
misinformation are priorities. For other upcoming services and products, the
company has a lower bar and will try to curb issues relating to hate and
toxicity, danger and misinformation rather than preventing them, according to
the presentation.
The company intends, for example, to block certain words to
avoid hate speech and will try to minimize other potential issues.
Google expects governments to scrutinize its A.I. products
for signs of these issues. The company has recently been the subject of
numerous government inquiries and lawsuits accusing it of anti-competitive
business practices. It anticipates, according to the presentation, “increased
pressure on A.l. regulatory efforts because of rising concerns about
misinformation, harmful content, bias, copyright.”"
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