Google has launched an open ai model called ai.google.dev/gemma” rel=”nofollow noopener” target=”_blank” data-ylk=”slk:Gemma;cpos:1;pos:1;elm:context_link;itc:0;sec:content-canvas” class=”link “>Gem, which says it is created using the same research and technology that was used to build its Gemini ai models. The company says Gemma is its contribution to the open community and is intended to help developers “build ai responsibly.” As such, he also launched the Responsible Generative ai Toolkit alongside Gemma. It contains a debugging tool as well as a guide with best practices for ai development based on Google's experience.
The company has made Gemma available in two different sizes, Gemma 2B and Gemma 7B, which come with pre-trained, instruction-tuned variants and are lightweight enough to run directly on a developer's laptop or desktop. Google says that Gemma outperforms much larger models when it comes to key benchmarks and that both model sizes outperform other open models out there.
In addition to being powerful, Gemma models were trained to be safe. Google used automated techniques to remove personal information from the data it used to train the models, and used reinforcement learning based on human feedback to ensure that variants adjusted to Gemma's instructions displayed responsible behaviors. Enterprises and independent developers could use Gemma to create ai-powered applications, especially if none of the open models currently available are powerful enough for what they want to build.
Google plans to introduce even more Gemma variants in the future for an even more diverse range of applications. That said, those who want to start working with the models right now can access them through the Kaggle data science platform, the company's Colab laptops, or Google Cloud.