| Google employees are getting an AI-powered wingman in the company’s bid to improve efficiency.
The tech giant quietly launched an internal AI model dubbed “Goose” to help Googlers code faster, according to internal documents reviewed by Business Insider’s Hugh Langley.
(It’s unclear if the model’s name is an homage to Tom Cruise’s copilot in “Top Gun,” but Silicon Valley often thinks of AI tools that work alongside humans as “copilots.”)
Goose can answer questions about Google’s tech and write and edit code, according to an internal summary of the model. More broadly, it’s part of the company’s strategy to “bring AI to every stage of the product development process,” per one internal doc.
Google’s not the only tech giant looking to give its developers an AI-powered leg up. Microsoft has also rolled out Copilot, its generative AI assistant built in partnership with OpenAI, to internal teams.
Tech companies have tested inventions on their own employees for years in a process known as “dogfooding,” writes BI’s Alistair Barr.
But the adoption of Copilot externally has reportedly been a bit of a mixed bag, with some customers unhappy that an expensive tool ($30 per person) wasn’t always reliable or accurate. |