Google will assess and address unfairness issues in how publicly accessible natural language is handled through Project Bindi.
According to a Google official, the project will allow the corporation to expand research, expertise, and understanding of AI models in three dimensions.
Google has made a number of announcements regarding new programmes, such as AI for India, which attempts to bridge the linguistic gap on the internet.
The tech giant Google unveiled Project Bindi, a programme to evaluate and address fairness issues in publicly available natural language processing models, at its premier event, Google for India 2022.
According to Sapna Chadha, vice president of marketing at Google, this project will allow us to advance research, knowledge, and build understanding of AI models along three dimensions: social context, such as family structure and education, technology gaps, such as access and culture, and social norms.
Artificial intelligence has accelerated India’s digital transformation, making it all the more important to make strategic investments in initiatives that prevent real-world societal prejudices from showing up in technology. Every culture and community has prejudices, Chadha continued.
Google made a number of new announcements at the event, including AI for India, which intends to bridge the language gap on the internet, as well as new partnerships and investments to support India’s responsible AI growth.
As part of Project Vaani, Google also announced a partnership with the Indian Institute of Science, Bengaluru, to record several Indian dialects in order to improve AI language models.
According to the firm, this partnership aims to gather and transcrib open-source voice data from all 773 districts of India and make it thereafter accessible through the Bhashini project of the Indian government.
It’s interesting to note that YouTube announced the introduction of the courses at the event. The feature, which will debut in 2023, will incorporate a Learning Management System (LMS)-style component into the YouTube app.
According to Ishan Chatterjee, head of YouTube India, the creative ecosystem of YouTube supported more than 750,000 full-time jobs in 2021 and added INR 10,000 Cr to India’s GDP.
Google announced a number of efforts, including the creation of bilingual search results pages for those who prefer it. The IT giant claimed that it can now deliver content in a local language alongside results in English thanks to sophisticated machine learning-based translation models and multilingual search technologies.