Kenya, November 19 2025 - For all the noise surrounding artificial intelligence, one truth often gets lost: most AI systems are still built for a narrow slice of the world, English speakers with stable internet and a high level of digital comfort. Everyone else is left adapting to tools that were never meant for them. But in Kenya, Microsoft is quietly rewriting that script.
Through Project Gecko, a collaboration with researchers in Africa, India, and the United States, Microsoft is showing what the next era of inclusive AI could and should look like. The company isn’t just scaling existing tools. Instead, it is helping define a model of development that starts with communities historically left out of global tech ecosystems.
Rather than forcing users to adjust to unfamiliar interfaces, the new multi-modal system created under Project Gecko understands speech, images, and video, the kinds of communication that reflect how real people actually seek information. For rural farmers who rely on oral learning in their own languages, that shift is transformative.
Agriculture is the first testing ground, and Microsoft’s role has been pivotal in enabling that leap. By supporting the integration of advanced AI with Digital Green’s vast library of local training videos, the company is demonstrating a philosophy the tech world desperately needs: AI should meet users where they are, not where developers assume they are.

A farmer can now ask a question in Kikuyu, Dholuo, Somali, or several other Kenyan languages and receive accurate, timestamped guidance drawn from community-made tutorials. This is not a cosmetic feature. It’s a fundamental rethinking of who AI is built for and whose knowledge is prioritized.
More from Kenya
Even more importantly, Microsoft’s involvement signals a shift away from Western-centric datasets. By training models on thousands of hours of Kenyan speech and context-rich video content, the project is broadening what AI understands and who it can serve effectively.
Critics often claim that big tech only innovates for markets that maximize profit. Project Gecko complicates that narrative. It shows that when companies invest in localized, people-first solutions, the benefits ripple far beyond one community or country.
In many ways, Kenya is becoming the blueprint for how inclusive innovation should unfold, and Microsoft’s work here is helping define that global standard.
If the future of AI is to be fair, multilingual, and truly global, it will look much more like what’s happening in Kenya today than what’s been built in traditional tech hubs. And Microsoft, for once, is showing that the industry can choose to lead in the right direction.

More from Kenya

Unit trusts boom as new investors flood Kenya, assets hit Sh679.6bn

Nyong’o Commissions Rice Mill in Ahero to Boost Farmer Incomes and Food Security





