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Over the past year, we've seen first-hand that investing in AI education, resources, and community-building can have an outsized impact. For example, KOBI(opens in a new window), the winner of the OpenAI prize at The Tools Competition(opens in a new window), uses AI to help students with dyslexia learn to read. I-Stem(opens in a new window), one of the winners of the turn.io Chat for Impact contest(opens in a new window), uses AI to enhance access to inaccessible content designed to help blind and low-vision communities in India find meaningful employment. OpenAI has provided API credits and technical guidance to support the winning organizations and the dozens of others working to address global challenges.
To further support developers around the world, OpenAI also funded and published(opens in a new window) a professional translation of the Massive Multitask Language Understanding (MMLU) benchmark(opens in a new window), a measure of general AI intelligence, into 14 languages: Arabic, Bengali, Chinese, French, German, Hindi, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Swahili, and Yoruba.
Supporting those who understand the unique cultures, economies, and social dynamics of their communities will help ensure that AI applications are tailored to meet local needs. Developers and organizations are key to making artificial intelligence more widely accessible and enabling people around the world—regardless of where they live or what language they speak—to use the technology to solve hard problems.
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