GOOGLE, a popular technology company owned by Alphabet Inc, which recently introduced the AI generative service Bard, has now begun to offer the service in select countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom for a limited number of users.

Previously, it was reported that some of the Pixel superfans would be invited to test the service and would be providing feedback to the company in order to make the in-trend AI service better. However, the company still has not revealed the date of the public release of the platform, and is currently available for select Pixel Superfans.

Speaking the user interface and the design that Google shared in its blog post seems to resemble the Microsoft-backed ChatGPT but with few differences. As per the blog post, the Bard AI gets a thumbs up, thumbs down, refresh arrow, and "Google it" button. Additionally, the users can also opt for an alternate response by tapping on the view other drafts option.

Google has implemented guardrails to avoid mistakes and major blunders, as Bard may not always provide the correct results. Surprisingly, Google is still seeking input from a wide range of specialists. "We'll continue to improve Bard and add capabilities, such as coding, other languages, and multimodal experiences," the business adds in a blog post. And one thing is certain: we will study together with you. Bard will continue to improve thanks to your comments."

Google defines Bard as a cooperative experiment with generative AI, a method that uses historical data to generate rather than identify content. The debut of ChatGPT, a chatbot from Microsoft-backed firm OpenAI, last year sparked a race in the technology sector to put AI in the hands of more users. The goal is to transform how people work while also winning business. Only two days ago, Google and Microsoft released a flurry of AI announcements, both of which highlighted the integration of artificial intelligence into a variety of their services, including Docs, Powerpoint, Outlook, and Gmail.