Inaccurate images generated by AI chatbot were ‘unacceptable’, says Google boss

28 February 2024, 12:44

A Google building
Google-Reddit-Partnership. Picture: PA

The tech giant said it had been working ‘around the clock’ to address the issue.

The historically inaccurate images generated by Google’s Gemini AI chatbot were “unacceptable”, chief executive Sundar Pichai has said in a memo to staff.

Last week, users of Gemini began flagging that the chatbot was generating images showing a range of ethnicities and genders, even when doing so was historically inaccurate – for example, prompts to generate images of certain historical figures, such as the US founding fathers, returned images depicting women and people of colour.

Some critics accused Google of anti-white bias, while others suggested the company appeared to have over-corrected over concerns about longstanding racial bias issues within AI technology which had previously seen facial recognition software struggling to recognise, or mislabelling, black faces, and voice recognition services failing to understand accented English.

Following the Gemini image generation incident, Google apologised, paused the image tool and said it was working to fix it.

But issues were then also flagged with some text responses, with an incident highlighted where Gemini said there was “no right or wrong answer” to a question equating Elon Musk’s influence on society with Adolf Hitler’s.

Now Mr Pichai has addressed the issue with staff for the first time and promised changes.

In his memo, Mr Pichai said the image and text responses were “problematic” and that Google had been working “around the clock” to address the issue.

“I know that some of its responses have offended our users and shown bias – to be clear, that’s completely unacceptable and we got it wrong,” he said.

“No Al is perfect, especially at this emerging stage of the industry’s development, but we know the bar is high for us and we will keep at it for however long it takes. And we’ll review what happened and make sure we fix it at scale.”

He said Google had “always sought to give users helpful, accurate and unbiased information” in its products and this was why “people trust them”.

“This has to be our approach for all our products, including our emerging AI products”, he added.

Going forward, Mr Pichai said “necessary changes” would be made inside the company to prevent similar issues occurring again.

“We’ll be driving a clear set of actions, including structural changes, updated product guidelines, improved launch processes, robust evals (sic) and red-teaming, and technical recommendations. We are looking across all of this and will make the necessary changes,” he said.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer making a speech at a podium with a sign that reads Plan For Change

More than 100 AI trials to boost small-business productivity launched

The report follows an eight-month inquiry into engineering biology (PA)

UK must do more to lead innovation in bio-tech sector, Lords committee says

A woman's hand pressing the keys of a laptop keyboard

Proposals aim to protect UK infrastructure from ransomware

Aerial view of a child accessing social media apps on a smartphone

Access to children’s social media after death ‘moral and humane right’, MPs hear

Elon Musk

Musk tried to ‘undermine’ general election and ‘depose’ Starmer, MPs told

Harry and Meghan stand side by side at the Invictus Games in Dusseldorf

Harry and Meghan criticise Meta over fact-checking changes

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer speaks with researchers and professors during a visit to a laboratory

UK will be ‘AI superpower’, says Starmer as he unveils plans to boost growth

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer visit to Google AI Campus

AI action plan: The key points in the UK’s plan to be a ‘world leader’ in field

Jenny Eclair in yellow jacket

Jenny Eclair says she ‘can’t compete’ with ‘terrible’ AI Parkinson podcast

Peter Kyle answers a question while appearing on the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg show

Tech giants must obey UK’s online safety laws, says minister

Peter Kyle

UK must not let AI ‘wash over our economy’, says Science Secretary

Sir Keir Starmer gesticulates as he delivers a speech at Google's London AI Campus

UK to go ‘all-in’ on AI as Starmer throws weight of Whitehall behind technology

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer gives a speech during a visit to Google's new AI Campus in Somers Town, north west London, on Wednesday November 27, 2024.

Starmer vows to make Britain ‘world-leader’ in AI to boost growth as private firms commit £14 billion to the industry

Online safety laws must constantly adapt along with tech, says minister

Online safety laws must constantly adapt along with tech, says minister following criticism from Molly Russell's father

Peter Kyle speaks to the press outside Broadcasting House in London

UK will not pit AI safety against investment in bid for growth, says minister

Molly Russell who took her own life in November 2017 after she had been viewing material on social media

UK going ‘backwards’ on online safety, Molly Russell’s father tells Starmer