Changes to Google’s work environment teams structure were revealed by Alphabet Inc. CEO Sundar Pichai, who said the changes will speed up and improve the company’s development of artificial intelligence products and services.
Pichai announced that the company’s flagship artificial intelligence subsidiary, Google DeepMind, will house the models, research, and responsible AI teams in a memo to staff members that was also posted on the company’s blog on Thursday.
Employees working on the technology across Google Research and Google DeepMind will come together as a single team to expedite work on Google’s AI models, Gemini and Gemma. This will also concentrate the costly processing resources needed to train and construct the systems under one arm of the corporation. All business-wide responsible AI teams will be consolidated under Google DeepMind.
Meanwhile, Pichai announced that Google’s hardware, software, and AI teams will combine their efforts into a new unit called Platform and Devices, which will include people working on products like Android, Chrome, search, and pictures. Employees working on computational photography and on-device AI capabilities, such as Google’s recently announced “circle to search” AI tool in collaboration with Samsung Electronics Co., will also be part of the group.
“We will work with greater focus and clarity toward our mission,” Pichai wrote of the modifications.
Google has been working harder on generative AI to catch up to Microsoft Corp. and OpenAI, who are perceived by many as having a more advanced effort. However, Google has also been refocusing its efforts and cutting expenses. This has led to a succession of cascading job cuts over the last few months, giving workers a terrifying new reality of instability. The company laid off hundreds of employees in January from its hardware, engineering, and digital assistant departments.
Google justified the restructure at the same time, citing the need to sharpen its focus on the introduction of AI products and services. The business released Gemini 1.5 Pro, a more potent version of their AI model, earlier this year. It claimed that this version could process more text, video, and even audio outputs than competitors. To help the company win over the open-source community, it also relaunched the chatbot as Gemini and provided a larger, more transparent language model.
However, Google has also had difficulties. For example, the business came under fire when its AI tool for generating photos of humans produced historically inaccurate representations. In an apparent attempt to reduce the dangers involved with releasing consumer-facing AI products, Pichai also announced on Thursday the creation of a dedicated company Trust and Safety team, which would devote greater resources to testing and assessing AI systems.
Pichai also made reference in his email to this week’s staff protest against Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion joint venture between Amazon.com Inc. and the Israeli government and military to supply AI and cloud services. Google dismissed 28 workers who were part of the protest on Wednesday.
Pichai added, “We have a culture of vibrant, open discussion that enables us to turn great ideas into action and create amazing products.” “But in the end, we are a workplace, and our expectations and policies are clear: This is a business, not a place to act in a way that causes fear or disruption to coworkers, to try to use the company as a personal platform, to argue politics or engage in disruptive behavior.”