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Google to give Ksh.749M funding for AI training in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa

Google to give Ksh.749M funding for AI training in Kenya, Nigeria and South Africa

FILE – An exterior view of Google’s Bay View Campus in Mountain View, California, U.S. May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Peter DaSilva

Google is providing $5.8 million (Ksh.749
million) backing through its charity arm Google.org for foundational artificial
intelligence (AI) and cybersecurity training this year across Kenya, Nigeria and
South Africa, the American tech giant announced on Monday.

Google’s President of Europe, the Middle East
and Africa Matt Brittin said the funding will support organisations
providing foundational AI skills to workers, educating teenagers about AI and
its safe and ethical use, equipping non-profit leaders with AI knowledge, and
supporting the public sector to develop and utilise AI solutions.

Among the funding recipients is the Raspberry
Pi Foundation, which will provide $300,000 (Ksh.38.8 million) to the Young Scientists Kenya and
Data Scientists Network Foundation to roll out AI literacy education for Kenyan
and Nigerian youth.

Young Scientists Kenya organises a National
Science and Technology competition aimed at giving young people from across the
country an opportunity to demonstrate innovation.

Nigeria’s Data Scientists Network
Foundation will also get 
a $1.5 million (Ksh.194 million) grant, while the Nelson Mandela University in
South Africa and other universities will participate in the Cybersecurity Seminars program which includes $500,000 (Ksh.64.6 million) in grant support.

“AI could contribute $30 billion to the
economy of sub-Saharan Africa. But for this to be a meaningful change, everyone
needs to be included. The $5.8 million announced today will help bring people,
businesses and non-profits along to take part in harnessing technology for good,”
Brittin told journalists in Nairobi.

The latest funding builds on the $20
million of Google.org support for organisations helping Africans develop
digital skills. Among them is 
Jacaranda
Health, a Kenyan start-up using Natural Language Processing (NLP) trained in
African languages to expand digital health services.

Google.org has given the start-up a
$1.4 million grant and fellowship to advance PROMPTS – their AI-enabled support
tool which provides personalized SMS advice to new and expecting mothers across
Kenya.

The tech company has also backed AirQo Africa, a project using AI to measure and tackle
air pollution on the continent which recently put up 
two air monitoring sites in Nairobi.

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