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ChatGPT changed how humans view and interact with language. Here’s how the Earth Species Project is using new billionaire funding to build a similar model for animals.

Read the full story on Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/phoebeliu/2024/10/17/this-nonprofit-wants-to-use-ai-to-understand-animal-communicationand-two-billionaires-are-backing-it/

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Transcript
00:00Today on Forbes, this non-profit wants to use AI to understand animal communication,
00:07and two billionaires are backing it.
00:10The Earth Species Project, a U.S.-based non-profit that aims to decode animal communication by using AI,
00:17announced $17 million in new grants from billionaires on Thursday,
00:22the organization shared exclusively with Forbes.
00:26Of the new funding, $10 million came from billionaire investor and entrepreneur Reed Hoffman's Aphorism Foundation,
00:33and the remaining $7 million is a three-year pledge from the Waverly Street Foundation,
00:38one of billionaire Lorene Powell Jobs' philanthropic vehicles.
00:43The Earth Species Project plans to use the funding, which amounts to more than five times its 2023 expenses,
00:50to quote, at least double the size of its AI research team.
00:54Its eight-person global research team is currently studying bird vocalization patterns to help with conversation efforts
01:01and working on an early-chat-GPT-esque model for animals, regardless of species.
01:06The organization's ultimate goal is for its research to shift humans' understanding of our place in the natural world,
01:13and in doing so, help with climate change and biodiversity.
01:18Aza Raskin, co-founder and president of the six-year-old Earth Species Project and a Forbes 30 Under 30 alum, says, quote,
01:26In the last two years, AI has shown us that anything that can be translated will be translated.
01:31Like the telescope that allowed us to discover that Earth was not the center of the solar system,
01:36I think our tools are going to let us look out at the universe and discover that humanity is not the center.
01:43In 2013, Raskin was listening to an NPR story about the gelato monkey's human-like vocalizations
01:49when he first wondered if animal communication could be decoded.
01:53Five years later, the three-time entrepreneur and former Mozilla designer co-founded the Earth Species Project
02:00with two other Silicon Valley alumni, Brit Selvattel, part of the founding team at Twitter,
02:05and Katie Zakarian, an early Facebook employee.
02:10The organization wants to make it possible for humans to communicate with other species,
02:14or at least understand what they are saying, by 2030.
02:18So far, it's done that by funding research on specific animals' vocalization patterns,
02:23including current projects with beluga whales, crows, and zebra finches.
02:28It's also done that by funding research through a more general, quote, foundation model,
02:33that it aims to evolve into something like what ChatGPT is for human communication.
02:38The earliest version of the general model was released in 2022
02:42and identifies patterns within a trove of audio recordings of animals across species
02:46through a variety of machine learning techniques.
02:49One such technique, for example, is a, quote, embedding,
02:53which is like a network graph that groups sounds and images by similarity.
02:57As the organization gets more data and updates their models, more patterns will appear,
03:02eventually allowing us to extrapolate so-called, quote, meaning from that data
03:07based on their similarity, without needing any underlying knowledge of what the data means.
03:13Since its founding, Earth Species Project has published five peer-reviewed papers,
03:17with a sixth in the pipeline, and self-published three papers.
03:21Some are related to specific species and others to its foundation model.
03:25The Earth Species Project has largely run on donations from billionaires,
03:29in part thanks to its co-founder's roots in Silicon Valley.
03:32Raskin met Hoffman when he was working at Mozilla designing Firefox,
03:36and Hoffman was on the board.
03:38He first floated the idea of the Earth Species Project to Hoffman in 2015.
03:42Raskin says that Hoffman is, quote,
03:44fascinated by the philosophical implications of what happens when it's not just humans
03:49that have culture and have language,
03:51and what that means for the shift in the relationship between humanity and the rest of nature.
03:56Raskin says that he was introduced to Powell Jobs' Waverly Street Foundation in 2022
04:01through a mutual friend who was working to fight climate change.
04:05Per Raskin, making animals appear more so-called, quote,
04:08human could get people to care more about them and care about biodiversity,
04:12which would help sustain the planet and human life.
04:16For full coverage, check out Phoebe Liu's piece on Forbes.com.
04:22This is Kieran Meadows from Forbes. Thanks for tuning in.
04:35For more stories, visit nyseagrant.org

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