Google has temporarily stopped its Gemini Artificial Intelligence chatbot from generating images of people. This comes a day after the tech giant issued an apology for “inaccuracies” in historical depictions the chatbot was creating.
After Google released its revamped Gemini in some parts of the world on February 8, some users earlier this week posted screenshots on social media showing how the chatbot was inaccurately depicting white-dominated scenes with racially diverse characters.
For example, the Gemini AI chatbot depicted Nazi-era troops as people from diverse ethnic backgrounds.
The results generated by the tool led to criticism and questions about whether the company was over-correcting for the risk of racial bias in its AI model.
What did Google say about the controversy?
Soon after the controversy, Google released a statement on X (formerly Twitter), saying, “We're already working to address recent issues with Gemini's image generation feature. While we do this, we're going to pause the image generation of people and will re-release an improved version soon.”
Earlier, on Thursday, Google said the team was aware that Gemini was offering inaccuracies in some historical image generation depictions.
It added, “We are working to improve these kinds of depictions immediately. Gemini's AI image generation does generate a wide range of people. And that's generally a good thing because people around the world use it. But it is missing the mark.”
What is Google Gemini AI?
Formerly known as the Bard chatbot, Gemini is the latest addition to an ever-growing field of artificial intelligence.
It is a family of multimodal large language models designed for language, audio, code, and video understanding.
Powered by the Imagen 2 model, the Gemini AI chatbot allows users to generate high-quality images with text prompts.
Google officially released the Gemini AI last year on December 6. As it integrates natural language processing and image recognition, Gemini enables tasks such as image captioning and complex visual parsing. It doesn't require external OCR tools.
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