Cocoa of billionaire Kim Beom-Su announced a partnership with Openai on Tuesday, including a deal to use the technology of the AI ​​startup, to operate the new personalized AI tool of the South Korean internet giant and to develop new products that are on Korean users are tailored.

In a joint press conference in Seoul, Kocao said that the upcoming AI -Messaging -Service was being built on the advanced models from Openai. The new service, known as Kanana, will be able to provide personalized answers based on chat recordings. Kocao added that it would use Openai’s technology in more of its existing products, including messaging app cocoa talk.

In the meantime, Kocao and Openai said that they would develop products together without going out.

“Kocao has a deep understanding of how technology can enrich everyday life and they have consistently had innovative experiences to their users,” said Sam Altman, co -founder and CEO of Openaai. “We are pleased to bring the million millions of cocoa advanced AI and work together to integrate our technology into service that change communication and connection between cocoa users.”

Shina Chung, CEO of Kocao, said the partnership marked “a turning point in Kocao’s efforts to bring the future closer”. Chung said that cocoa would focus on the development of his own large voice models and cited high costs without a clear business model.

Chung took over the rudder of the Korean internet giant last March last March after being in his risk capital arm for ten years. She was commissioned to be arrested as the founder and chairman of cocoa, Kim, last July due to allegations of stock corporation manipulation during the company’s bidding war for one of the country’s largest K-pop agencies. Chung, the first CEO of cocoa, built up the list of Forbes Asia Power Business Women last year.

Kocao is the youngest large tech company in Asia, which has come together with Openaai, the US company behind the popular chattbot. On Monday, Openais Altman joined Softbank Group’s billionaire founder and CEO Masayoshi Sohn in Tokyo to present a joint venture with the Japanese investment Titan. The company, known as SB Openaai Japan, will sell AI services to companies in Japan. Softbank announced that it will also spend 3 billion US dollars a year to use Openai’s technology for group companies.

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