Google adding AI tools to cloud

Clients to have access to Meta and Anthropic technology

Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet, during the Google I/O Developers Conference in Mountain View, Calif., on May 10. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris.
Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet, during the Google I/O Developers Conference in Mountain View, Calif., on May 10. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by David Paul Morris.

Alphabet's Google is adding artificial intelligence tools from companies including Meta Platforms and Anthropic to its cloud platform, weaving more generative AI into its products and positioning itself as a one-stop shop for cloud customers seeking to tap into the technology.

Google's cloud clients will be able to access Meta's Llama 2 large language model, as well as AI startup Anthropic's Claude 2 chatbot, to customize with enterprise data for their own apps and services.

The move, announced last week at Google's Next '23 event in San Francisco, is part of the company's effort to position its platform as one where customers have the freedom to choose an AI model that best meets their needs, whether from the company itself or one of its partners. More than 100 powerful AI models and tools are now available to Google Cloud clients, the company said.

The company also announced wider availability of its Duet AI product for customers of its Workspace productivity suite, with access for the public to follow later this year.

Users can tap a generative AI helper, which responds to prompts to help create content on apps like Google Docs, Sheets and Slides. Duet AI, introduced in May, can take notes during video calls, send meeting summaries and translate captions in 18 languages, Google said.

Through a new feature called "attend for me," users can dispatch the tool to join meetings on their behalf, deliver messages and create a recap of the event. Google also said it has new partnerships with companies such as GE Appliances and Fox Sports, which will allow customers to take advantage of AI, for example, to create custom recipes or see a playback of a sports event from Fox's broadcast catalog.

With the announcements, Google is signaling that it's more willing than ever to work with other companies in artificial intelligence as it aims to gain market share from its competitors. While the company still trails Amazon and Microsoft in the cloud computing market, Google said the AI additions to its cloud catalog give the platform the widest variety of models to choose from.

"We are in an entirely new era of digital transformation, fueled by gen AI," Thomas Kurian, chief executive officer of Google Cloud, said in a blog post timed to the announcements. "This technology is already improving how businesses operate and how humans interact with one another."

Beyond adding new AI models to its cloud catalog, Google said it was making improvements to its own AI models and tools. PaLM 2, Google's large language model that it announced at its annual developers conference in May, is now available in 38 languages and can better analyze longer documents like research papers, books and legal briefs, the company said. Meanwhile, Google's AI model that helps with coding, called Codey, has been updated to enhance performance. Imagen, the company's text-to-image app, will feature better-quality images and newer capabilities like style tuning, to help cloud customers better align their images to brand guidelines, the company said.

Amid growing concerns about how companies should deal with the wave of AI-generated content, Google Cloud announced a feature that will embed a watermark to indicate that images were created by artificial intelligence. The feature, which is powered by technology from AI lab Google DeepMind, will include the watermark at the pixel level, meaning it will be hard to alter, the company said.

Information for this article was contributed by Ian King of Bloomberg News.

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