AI Research
Google invests $1 billion in AI education training over 3 years in US

NVIDIA CEO and co-founder Jensen Huang commends President Donald Trump’s A.I. agenda and outlines what the country’s job future will look like on ‘Special Report.’
Google is investing $1 billion to support artificial intelligence training and education initiatives in the U.S. over the next three years, underscoring how tech giants are working to scale access to their learning models and shape the future of education.
Google’s investment includes funding for new AI learning tools, and the Google AI for Education Accelerator, which is a new initiative that will provide free AI training and Google Career Certificates to every U.S. college student at over 100 universities and community colleges for free.
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Students who are at least 18 years old will also get access to a free 12-month Google AI Pro plan, which includes advanced AI tools like NotebookLM for notes, Deep Research for custom reports, and Veo 3 for video generation.
“Guided Learning encourages participation through probing and open-ended questions that spark a discussion and provide an opportunity to dive deeper into a subject,” Google Vice President of Learning Maureen Heymans said, adding that the aim of the tool is to help someone “build a deep understanding instead of just getting answers by acting like your personal AI learning companion.”
Heymans said Guided Learning breaks down problems step-by-step and adapts explanations to your needs.
Gemini and Google logos on a smartphone. (Photo by Lorenzo Di Cola/NurPhoto via Getty Images. / Getty Images)
This follows the company’s June announcement of new Gemini tools for students and educators. Chief among them is Gemini for Education, a version of its Gemini app designed specifically for the “unique needs of the educational community,” according to Google’s blog.
Google says the tool is built to save time, support personalized learning and help students and teachers generate ideas and learn with confidence, all within a secure environment.
Gemini for Education, which is built with Gemini 2.5 Pro, gives students and educators access to the company’s premium AI models. It includes strong privacy protections and is managed by school administrators. To underscore its privacy safeguards, the company notes that user data is not human-reviewed and is not used to train AI models.

Visitors walk through the Law Quad at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Monday, July 28, 2025. ( Emily Elconin/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
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Google also added Gemini AI tools in Google Classroom to all schools using Google Workspace for Education for free. Google said it is also using dozens of new features to help teachers work more efficiently. This includes tools that automatically create vocabulary lists with definitions and example sentences.
“Guided Learning represents an important step in our path to helping everyone in the world learn anything in the world,” Heymans said, adding that the company also recognizes “that the path forward is one of immense possibility and shared responsibility to ensure AI truly benefits all learners.”
Google is far from the only one targeting education. Microsoft also announced a slate of new AI features for educators in its Microsoft 365 Copilot, including Copilot Chat for teenage students.

A University of Michigan flag on the Michigan Union building at the school’s campus in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Monday, July 28, 2025. (Photographer: Emily Elconin/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
The tech giant said that AI in education is advancing daily, with over 80% of surveyed educators using AI this year, which is up 21 points from last year. The company also noted that approximately one in three surveyed United States K-12 educators still lacks confidence in using AI effectively and responsibly. More than half of students surveyed say they have not received AI training.
“It’s critical to engage with students, educators, and all community stakeholders to address challenges, learn together, and co-develop the path forward. Further, we need to collectively prepare for an AI-powered future and support students in building relevant AI skills as every industry and discipline evolves,” Microsoft said in its June post.

Texas A&M administration building on Wednesday, July 3, 2024, in College Station, Texas. ( Ishika Samant/Houston Chronicle via Getty Images. / Getty Images)
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In 2023, Amazon launched a new initiative, dubbed “AI Ready,” with a goal of providing free AI skills training and education to two million people globally by 2025. It reached this mark by 2024.
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Amazon has previously underscored how the potential benefits of these skills are “enormous.” The company said in a 2024 blog that AI skills could boost productivity by at least 39% and increase salaries by up to 30%.
“But in order to fully harness this potential, organizations will need to address the pressing gap in AI-specific skills in the workforce,” Amazon said.
AI Research
Researchers ‘polarised’ over use of AI in peer review

Researchers appear to be becoming more divided over whether generative artificial intelligence should be used in peer review, with a survey showing entrenched views on either side.
A poll by IOP Publishing found that there has been a big increase in the number of scholars who are positive about the potential impact of new technologies on the process, which is often criticised for being slow and overly burdensome for those involved.
A total of 41 per cent of respondents now see the benefits of AI, up from 12 per cent from a similar survey carried out last year. But this is almost equal to the proportion with negative opinions which stands at 37 per cent after a 2 per cent year-on-year increase.
This leaves only 22 per cent of researchers neutral or unsure about the issue, down from 36 per cent, which IOP said indicates a “growing polarisation in views” as AI use becomes more commonplace.
Women tended to have more negative views about the impact of AI compared with men while junior researchers tended to have a more positive view than their more senior colleagues.
Nearly a third (32 per cent) of those surveyed say they already used AI tools to support them with peer reviews in some form.
Half of these say they apply it in more than one way with the most common use being to assist with editing grammar and improving the flow of text.
A minority used it in more questionable ways such as the 13 per cent who asked the AI to summarise an article they were reviewing – despite confidentiality and data privacy concerns – and the 2 per cent who admitted to uploading an entire manuscript into a chatbot so it could generate a review on their behalf.
IOP – which currently does not allow AI use in peer reviews – said the survey showed a growing recognition that the technology has the potential to “support, rather than replace, the peer review process”.
But publishers must fund ways to “reconcile” the two opposing viewpoints, the publisher added.
A solution could be developing tools that can operate within peer review software, it said, which could support reviewers without positing security or integrity risks.
Publishers should also be more explicit and transparent about why chatbots “are not suitable tools for fully authoring peer review reports”, IOP said.
“These findings highlight the need for clearer community standards and transparency around the use of generative AI in scholarly publishing. As the technology continues to evolve, so too must the frameworks that support ethical and trustworthy peer review,” Laura Feetham-Walker, reviewer engagement manager at IOP and lead author of the study, said.
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Amazon Employing AI to Help Shoppers Comb Reviews

Amazon earlier this year began rolling out artificial intelligence-voiced product descriptions for select customers and products.
AI Research
Nubank To Continue Leveraging AI To Enhance Digital Financial Services In Latin America

Nubank (NYSE: NU) is reportedly millions of customers across Latin America. Recently, the company’s Chief Technology Officer, Eric Young, shared his vision for leveraging artificial intelligence to fuel Nubank’s global expansion and improve financial services.
During a recent discussion, Young outlined how AI is not just a tool but a cornerstone for operational efficiency, customer-centric growth, and democratizing access to personalized finance.
With a career that includes work at Amazon in the early 2000s, Young brings a philosophy of prioritizing customer experience.
At Amazon, he witnessed firsthand how technology could transform user experiences, a mindset he now applies to Nubank’s mission. “If not us, then who?”
Young posed rhetorically during the videocast, underscoring Nubank’s unique position to disrupt traditional banking.
Founded in Brazil in 2013, Nubank has positively impacted the financial sector by prioritizing financial inclusion and superior customer service, challenging legacy banks with its digital-first approach.
Under Young’s leadership, Nubank’s priorities are clear: enhance agility, expand internationally, and harness AI to serve customers better.
He emphasized the need for cross-functional collaboration, particularly with the product and design teams.
This includes partnering with Nubank’s recently appointed Chief Design Officer (CDO), Ethan Eismann, to iterate quickly on new features.
By fostering a culture of testing and learning, Young aims to deliver products that not only meet but exceed user expectations, ultimately capturing a larger market share.
This involves deepening engagement with existing users, attracting new ones, and venturing into underserved markets where financial services remain inaccessible.
Central to Young’s strategy is AI’s transformative potential.
Nubank’s 2024 acquisition of Hyperplane, an AI-focused startup, marks a pivotal step in this direction.
Young highlighted how advanced language models—such as those powering ChatGPT and Google Gemini—can bridge the gap between everyday users and elite financial advisory services.
These models excel at processing vast amounts of data, including transaction histories, to offer hyper-personalized recommendations.
Imagine an AI that automates budgeting, predicts spending patterns, and suggests investment opportunities tailored to an individual’s financial profile, all without the hefty fees of traditional private banking.
Young drew a parallel to the exclusivity of high-end services.
Historically, AI-driven private banking was reserved for the ultra-wealthy, but Nubank’s vision is to make it ubiquitous.
“We’re democratizing access to hyper-personalized financial experiences.”
By analyzing user data ethically and securely, AI can empower customers from all segments—whether a small business owner in Mexico or a young professional in Colombia—to manage their finances with the precision once afforded only to elites.
This aligns with Nubank’s core ethos of inclusion, ensuring that technology serves as an equalizer rather than a divider.
Looking ahead, Young sees AI as the engine for Nubank’s platformization efforts, enabling scalable solutions that support international growth.
As Nubank eyes further expansion beyond Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia, AI will streamline operations, from fraud detection to customer support chatbots, reducing costs while enhancing reliability.
Yet, Young cautioned that success hinges on responsible implementation—prioritizing privacy, transparency, and human oversight to build trust.
In an era where fintechs aggressively compete for market share, Eric Young’s insights position Nubank not just as a bank, but as a key player in AI-powered financial services.
By blending technological prowess with a focus on the customer, Nubank is set to transform money management, making various services more accessible to consumers.
As Young basically put it, the question isn’t whether AI will change finance—it’s how Nubank will aim to make a positive impact.
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