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Facebook acquired an AI startup to help Messenger build out its personal assistant

Ozlo is joining Messenger.

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Facebook

Facebook has acquired Ozlo, a Palo Alto-based artificial intelligence startup, to help Messenger build out a more elaborate virtual assistant for users.

Ozlo specializes in understanding text-based conversations, and claims it can understand and provide answers to questions that don’t necessarily have simple yes or no answers — what Ozlo calls “probabilistic assertions of truth.”

On the company’s website, for example, a short demo shows its AI assistant answering a question about whether or not a restaurant is “group friendly” based on pulling and understanding multiple reviews.

Ozlo’s website claims it has 30 employees, and a Facebook spokesperson says the “majority of the team” will be joining Messenger in Facebook’s offices in either Menlo Park, Calif., or Seattle, Wash.

Facebook is buying the company’s technology and workforce, and it sounds as though Ozlo’s technology will fold into Messenger’s existing AI efforts, though it’s unclear if that includes Messenger’s existing virtual assistant, M.

“They’re just going to be working with [Messenger] to continue their work with artificial intelligence and machine learning,” a spokesperson said. She also declined to comment on the financial terms of the deal.

Related

Messenger started rolling out recommendations from its AI assistant earlier this year, which meant users might be prompted to order an Uber or pay a friend based on the conversation they’re having.

Publicly, Facebook has only featured its improvements around building a text-based assistant, despite others like Apple, Google and Amazon, which are building voice-controlled AI assistants.

Back in May, Messenger’s product boss Stan Chudnovsky explained that Facebook is focused on text-based AI because voice conversations require a third step that text conversations do not.

“Until we nail [text] we don’t want to go into a world where we teach people what we cannot do well,” Chudnovsky said. “Otherwise we’re going to be in the world where people very quickly realize certain things that we don’t do well yet and then they may not give us another try.”

Messenger hopes Ozlo can speed up that process.

The startup has raised $14 million from a number of investors, including Greylock. As part of the acquisition, it will shutter its existing app and its enterprise APIs.


This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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