Google developing AI-based messaging service: Report

Google developing AI-based messaging service: Report
A couple of news items from Google today: First, the company is reportedly working on a new kind of artificial intelligence-based messaging service, in an attempt to compete with Facebook’s WhatsApp and Messenger, according to the Wall Street Journal .

AI artificial intelligence neural networks

. The report said that Google plans to integrate chatbots, which answer user queries from within a messaging app after searching the Web for information. The idea is to provide the answer from within the context of a conversation without having to exit that conversation at any point.

“All users care about is a convenient way to find what they are looking for and if Google isn’t in front of the consumer that is a problem for them,” said Scott Stanford, co-founder of venture-capital firm Sherpa Capital, in the article. “Messaging is a subset of the Internet where Google is not strong. They have to win and be the dominant player in messaging.”

Google has tried and failed to reinvent messaging, email, and social networking several times in the past decade, including Google+, Google Wave, Google Buzz, Google Messenger, and Google Hangouts. Google has been struggling to capture users that have moved on to other services like the aforementioned Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp, particularly in other countries besides the US.

Back in January 2014, Google acquired the British artificial intelligence company DeepMindfor a reported $400 million, after hiring futurist and inventor Ray Kurzweil and acquiring eight robotics firms in the year prior. DeepMind aims to help researches mine big data in an effort to boost discoveries in medicine, genomics, and more. And in November of this year, Google unveiled TensorFlow, an open-source machine learning platform that could boost its deployment of artificial neural networks. At the time, Google called Tensorflow the company’s “second generation” machine learning platform, successor to the older DistBelief platform that has led to many of the company’s current AI-infused products.

Meanwhile, a separate Android Police reportsaid Google has confirmed it’s testing a new way to log into your account from multiple devices just by using your phone, without having to provide a password or use two-step authentication:

“We’ve invited a small group of users to help test a new way to sign in to their Google accounts, no password required. ‘Pizza’, ‘password’ and ‘123456’—your days are numbered.”

That report stemmed from a Reddit user who claimed to be testing the new feature on his Nexus 6P.

There’s no word when Google plans to unveil its new messaging service or roll out the phone-based login feature to more users.

Comments