The flagship AI companies in Germany do not come from the start-up centres in Berlin or Munich, but from North Rhine-Westphalia and Baden-Württemberg. Nor do they cater to the growing demand for content that is generated by artificial intelligence instead of humans, but instead aim to solve very specific problems.
DeepL
ChatGPT, Midjourney and Google Gemini would certainly be among the most frequently mentioned AI tools in a spontaneous survey of known AI applications, but DeepL? Probably not. Yet millions of people around the world already use AI translation from Cologne - both privately and professionally, and the trend is rising. The development of DeepL can certainly be described as astonishing and was also worth an article on //next.
The translation service, which emerged from the online dictionary Linguee in 2017, has not occupied a new market, but has taken on the heavyweight Google and its translation service. Despite this notable competition, DeepL has quickly made a name for itself for high-quality translations and established itself in professional circles.
Since January 2023, DeepL Write, an AI writing assistant, has also been added to the Cologne-based AI company's offering. The special feature: unlike ChatGPT, DeepL Write does not write itself, but optimises texts that have already been written.
Aleph Alpha
The city of Heidelberg's ‘digital citizen assistant’ goes by the name of ‘Lumi’. It provides visitors to the city portal with information about the city's services, provides information about planned measures to reduce CO2 emissions and helps interested parties to plan a visit to Heidelberg.
Lumi is the first milestone of the Heidelberg start-up Aleph Alpha, which is developing an innovative AI system. Unlike GPT-4, for example, which uses OpenAI for ChatGPT, the AI model is to be based on European data protection regulations. To this end, Aleph Alpha is developing its own LLM called ‘Luminous’, whose responses are intended to be traceable and transparent. Also unusual for the billion-dollar AI industry: Luminous' code is publicly accessible and Aleph Alpha is not aimed at the mass market of end users, but at companies and public authorities.