
The image shows Google CEO Sundar Pichai introducing Gemini AI. — Google
After implementing a hiatus in the internal utilisation if its own artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, Gemini last week, Google has now embarked to fix the AI-backed tool.
This has emerged after the company CEO Sundar Pichai found some text and image responses produced by the model to be "biased" and "completely unacceptable". The CEO told this in a note addressed to the company employees.
Some of the bot's responses were found biased and offensive by the users, Pichai told workers. The usage of the AI bot — which generates images of people — was halted last week after it generated false depictions of some historical figures.
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"Our teams have been working around the clock to address these issues. We're already seeing a substantial improvement on a wide range of prompts... And we'll review what happened and make sure we fix it at scale," he said.
After addressing the issue, Google now aims to relaunch its Gemini AI in the coming weeks.
The search engine giant has long indulged in efforts to outclass its rivals by developing an its own efficient AI model, including the Microsoft-backed OpenAI's ChatGPT which took the world by storm in 2022.
The generative AI chatbot Bard was launched almost a year ago which Google recently rebranded as Gemini and introduced paid subscription options for users to access enhanced reasoning capabilities of the tool.