Europe is determined to compete in the world of generative artificial intelligence (AI) by creating innovative companies seeking to stand out in a sector dominated by giants like OpenAI and Google, known for their famous ChatGPT and Bard chatbots. Among the outstanding firms, emerges Aleph Alphaan entity founded by Jonas Andrulis with the aim of placing the European continent at the forefront of this technology.
Aleph Alpha offers a generative artificial intelligence to companies and governments, focusing on the creation of efficient, transparent and customizable innovationadapted to the specific needs of its clients.
According to Wired (via 20 Bit), “clients ranging from banks to government agencies use the LLM (Aleph Alpha Language Model) to write new financial reports, concisely summarize hundreds of pages, and build chatbots that are experts in running a particular business”.
However, the real challenge lies in make this AI fully customizable and in different languages, so that organizations feel like they have full control over how it works. In essence, Aleph Alpha strives to develop an artificial intelligence that closely mimics human capabilities and is applicable to a wide variety of tasks.
Its differences with ChatGPT
Although questions are raised about Aleph Alpha’s ability to compete with ChatGPT, the company differentiates itself in its value-focused approach, personalization, and transparency to its clients. Aleph Alpha distances itself from US privacy and information security concerns related to tech giants.
Wired notes that “the AI industry in the European Union argues that European companies are probably more aware of issues such as privacy and discrimination than their US counterparts”.
Aleph Alpha seeks to address privacy and ethical concerns more effectively, making it a major competitor in the European generative AI market. The competition between the different visions and approaches in the field of AI promises an exciting and diversified future in this constantly evolving technology.