Kyutai’s Moshi challenges OpenAI’s ChatGPT

Funded with €300 million from investors including Niel, Rodolphe Saadé, and Eric Schmidt, Kyutai plans to release Moshi’s models and research as open-source technology.

 Art, Graphics, Light, Advertisement

A French AI research lab, Kyutai, backed by billionaire Xavier Niel, unveiled a new voice assistant, Moshi, that can express 70 different emotions and styles. Revealed at an event in Paris, Moshi demonstrated capabilities such as offering advice on climbing Mt. Everest and reciting poems with a thick French accent. According to Kyutai’s CEO, Patrick Pérez, this assistant could revolutionise human-machine communication.

Moshi enters a competitive landscape dominated by OpenAI’s ChatGPT and other players like Google and Anthropic. Despite OpenAI’s recent delay in launching a similar voice assistant due to safety concerns, Kyutai plans to release Moshi as open-source technology, allowing free access to its code and research. Such a step aims to foster transparency and collaboration in AI development.

Funded with €300 million and led by former Google DeepMind and Meta Platforms researchers, Kyutai seeks to position Europe as a significant player in AI. During the event, Chief Science Officer Hervé Jégou addressed safety issues, ensuring that tools like indexing and watermarking will track AI-generated audio. The new voice assistant highlights Europe’s potential to advance AI technology globally.