Tech giant Google has announced a significant expansion of its AI-powered search capabilities, integrating Hausa and Yoruba into its platform. The move is part of a broader strategy to make digital information more accessible across Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation.
The update means that millions of Nigerians can now engage with the web using their mother tongue to receive AI-generated summaries and engage in “conversational exploration.
Breaking Down Language Barriers
According to Google’s Communications Manager for West Africa, Taiwo Kola-Ogunlade, the initiative is less about simple translation and more about cultural nuance.
By leveraging a custom version of its “Gemini” model, Google aims to provide a search experience that feels “locally relevant.” This expansion brings the total number of African languages supported by Google’s AI Search features to 13.
The tech firm highlighted how this shift will democratise information access across different regions of Nigeria:
- In the North: A student in Kano can now research academic topics using Hausa.
- In the Southwest: A trader in Ibadan can seek business advice or market trends in Yorùbá.
“Building a truly global search goes far beyond translation; it requires a nuanced understanding of local information.
“With the advanced multimodal and reasoning capabilities of our custom version of Gemini in search, we have made huge strides in language understanding.
“This ensures our most advanced AI search capabilities are locally relevant and useful in each new language we support.
“This is about ensuring Nigerians can converse with search in their mother tongues, making information more helpful for everyone,” Mr Kola-Ogunlade said in a statement on Thursday.
A Natural Dialogue
The update supports both text and voice inputs, allowing users to pose complex queries as if they were speaking to another person. This multimodal approach is designed to help users explore the web more naturally, regardless of their English proficiency.
As Silicon Valley increasingly looks to the “next billion users,” this localised push suggests that the future of AI in Africa will be defined by how well these systems can speak the language of the streets—and the markets.