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Meta to pay $1 million to bolster UK government’s AI workforce

Facebook's Meta logo sign is seen at the company headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., on, Oct. 28, 2021.
Facebook's Meta logo sign is seen at the company headquarters in Menlo Park, Calif., on, Oct. 28, 2021. Copyright  AP Photo/Tony Avelar, File
Copyright AP Photo/Tony Avelar, File
By Euronews
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One of the world’s biggest tech and artificial intelligence (AI) companies will front a $1 million (€854,000) grant for the UK government to develop new technologies.

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The United Kingdom is bolstering its tech workforce to develop artificial intelligence (AI) tools for government. And Meta is footing the $1 million (€854,000) bill.

Through the new “Open-Source AI Fellowship,” 10 fellows will work with the UK government for one year to build AI tools for “high-security use cases” in the public sector, such as language translation for national security or using construction data to speed up approval processes to build more homes.

The fellows could also work on “Humphrey,” a suite of AI-powered tools for civil servants to help them effectively deliver on minister requests, like summarising documents, consultations, and taking notes. 

The programme could also see fellows using Meta’s Llama 3.5 AI model to create new tools that could unblock planning delays, boost national security, or reduce the cost to integrate AI throughout the government.

Meta will issue the $1 million grant to the Alan Turing Institute, and fellows will then be placed in the UK government.

“This Fellowship is the best of AI in action – open, practical, and built for public good. It’s about delivery, not just ideas – creating real tools that help government work better for people,” Peter Kyle, the UK’s technology secretary, said in a government release. 

The UK government is already testing an AI for the public service called Caddy, an open-source AI assistant used at Citizen’s Advice centres. It gives the users of a government call service advice on common questions about managing debt, getting legal help, or knowing their rights as a customer. 

The fellowships will begin in January 2026, and all of the initiatives developed by the engineers will be open-source and available for public use.

The announcement comes in the same week as another agreement struck between the UK government and Google Cloud that aims to upskill 100,000 civil servants in tech and AI by 2030. The goal of that programme is to have at least one in every 10 government officials be tech experts. 

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