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Charlotte Trueman
Senior Writer

Box taps Google Cloud’s generative AI capabilities to extract metadata

news
Nov 01, 20234 mins
Collaboration SoftwareFile SharingGenerative AI

Using Google’s Vertex AI platform, Box is rolling out new generative AI capabilities to improve how its enterprise customers are able to work.

cloud data warehouse
Credit: Thinkstock

Cloud content management company Box and Google Cloud have announced an expansion of their partnership in an effort to transform work within the enterprise through the use of generative AI.

Box is integrating with Vertex AI, Google Cloud’s unified AI platform, to build new generative AI features, including a new metadata extraction capability designed to  help its customers process and analyze data faster.

Vertex AI is a machine learning (ML) platform that allows users to train and deploy ML models and AI applications, and customize large language models (LLMs) for use in  AI-powered applications. Vertex AI combines data engineering, data science, and ML engineering workflows, enabling teams to collaborate using a common toolset to scale applications through the use of Google Cloud.

Generative AI is going to transform almost every industry and have a particular impact on knowledge and enterprise workers, said Stephan Orban, vice president of migrations, independent software vendors, and marketplace, at Google Cloud.

He added that when it comes to the software company partnerships that he looks after, he’s seen generative AI fitting into organizations at a number of different levels, with applications like Box, which sit on top of Vertex AI, using the technology to serve a number of different applications.

As part of the new integration, customers will be able to automatically classify and label documents en masse to surface important information about, for example, contacts nearing their expiration or invoices that require payment.

metadata extraction transparent bg Box

Box uses Google’s Vertex AI to extract metadata from documents.

Users will also be able to define metadata templates to extract information for customer use cases, such as automatically recognizing or tagging products in images, or populate defined metadata templates and integrate them with ERP and CRM systems to automate workflows.

Finally, the new integration will be able to identify and preserve critical information, such as timestamps, authorship, and document versions. Metadata can also be recognized and extracted in multiple languages in order to ensure consistent term recognition while operating across different regions.

The new features will be available to users first as an API.

“At Box, we’re focused on unstructured data in the enterprise and we believe that the capabilities of AI are going to be really great when you apply them to enterprise content,” said Ben Kus, CTO at Box.

Although Kus said Box considers itself to be “platform neutral” from the perspective of wanting to use the best models for the best use cases, he said Google’s technology offered the machine learning capabilities necessary to facilitate metadata extraction.

“We believe that the future value of AI will exist in places where it’s actually going to make a difference, such as applying AI to enterprise content and unstructured data,” Kus said. “It was so hard in the past to really extract those information insights but that has now been made possible in a way it just wasn’t before, and the great part is that the technology provided by Google and others is enabling this to happen.”

Box expands its use of Google Cloud

Box is now available on Google Cloud Marketplace, which the company says will result in reduced procurement cycles, consolidated Google Cloud billing, and cost savings against existing Google Cloud commitments when the content-management system is purchased through Google Cloud Marketplace.

Box is also expanding its usage of Google Cloud through the adoption of several new services across networking, data analytics, and machine learning. These include allowing Box users to select Google Cloud as a storage option for Box KeySafe and using Google Cloud’s networking infrastructure to support Box network communications and decrease the time it takes to transfer content.

Google Cloud Bigtable will provide improved performance and uptime for Box’s core data systems, while Google Cloud BigQuery will power Box’s data application, analytics, and insights.

The expanded partnership also benefits Google Workspace users, building on existing integrations by allowing customers to create, open, edit, and save content in Google Docs, Sheets, or Slides directly from within Box.

Users will also be able to add Box files directly to emails and save email attachments to Box without leaving Gmail; include Box files and link Box Notes directly into Google Calendar events; and save files in Google Drive to Box.

“We’re super excited about our partnership with Box, we’ve been working together for quite some number of years, across a wide range of technologies… and now we’re super excited for Box to take some of our Vertex AI capabilities and integrate them into its platform so our mutual customers are able to [benefit from all the capabilities] we’ve talked about,” Orban said.

Charlotte Trueman
Senior Writer

Charlotte Trueman is a staff writer at Computerworld. She joined IDG in 2016 after graduating with a degree in English and American Literature from the University of Kent. Trueman covers collaboration, focusing on videoconferencing, productivity software, future of work and issues around diversity and inclusion in the tech sector.

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