Samsung SDS demonstrated its latest artificial intelligence tools at CES in Las Vegas, showcasing technology that could reshape how global companies handle multilingual meetings and automate routine tasks. The company’s new CEO Lee Jun-hee presented Brity Copilot, which offers real-time translation for video conferences in 10 languages including Korean, English and Chinese, with translation support for 15 languages total.
The platform has gained traction since its April launch, attracting over 180,000 users across finance, manufacturing and construction sectors. Samsung SDS claims Brity Copilot’s Korean speech recognition outperforms global competitors by 9%.
The company plans to release additional features in the first half of 2024, including an AI assistant that can autonomously handle emails and schedule management. The system builds on Samsung’s cloud infrastructure and can be integrated with various large language models including GPT and Claude.
In one case study, the company’s Brity Automation tool, which combines generative AI with robotic process automation, reduced a task that previously required seven employees and 12 weeks to complete down to just one week.
The public version of Brity Copilot currently runs on GPT-3.5 and will upgrade to a streamlined GPT-4 version next month, while a private version uses LLaMA 3.1.