Editorial

UK AI start-up secures first software Enterprise Agreement Lite with UK MoD

Oxford Dynamics has been awarded an Enterprise Agreement Lite by the UK Ministry of Defence worth up to £2 million for its gen AI technology, AVIS.

Posted 17 September 2024 by Christine Horton


AI & robotics start-up Oxford Dynamics (OD) has secured an Enterprise Agreement Lite with the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD) worth up to £2 million for its generative AI (gen AI) technology to assist with the searching, interrogation and summarising of complex data.

This is the first AIfocused EA Lite contract of its type to be awarded by the MoD.

Oxford Dynamics co-founders Shefali Sharma and Dr Eddie Jackson

The company points to most governments and their various agencies being inundated with data, leading to vast data silos of information. The data is created at such a rate that analyst teams can’t ingest all data, leading to sub-optimal decision making. This is where Oxford Dynamics’ AVIS technology comes in, it said.

“AVIS is a highly modular scalable software platform designed to ingest both real-time and archive data. It allows complex data interrogation, comparison and summaries to be achieved in seconds via very human-like conversations,” said OD co-founder and director, Dr Eddie Jackson.

“In simple terms, you can think of AVIS as a smart combination of a searching algorithm like Google search and a large language model, such as ChatGPT. However, these types of technologies suffer from inherent, intractable challenges such as lack of explainability and trustworthiness, together with inability to scale to enterprise level – and that’s where AVIS comes in.”

UK SMEs are seen as a vital resource capability for the MoD, allowing some the of most innovative ideas and technologies to be rapidly developed.

“AI is seen as a strategically important capability for the UK. We need to be at the forefront of this technology, both in understanding it and applying it to solve real-world pressing challenges. By offering such framework contracts to some of our most promising indigenous start-ups, we’re well placed to be early-adopters and shapers of such critical technologies,” said a spokesperson from Defence Digital Commercial & Commercial X, Ministry of Defence.

AVIS platform

Government customers, and those in highly regulated sectors such as insurance, pharmaceutical and banking, often require offline solutions given the sensitivity of their data.

“We’ve designed AVIS to work in a completely offline containerised format but also in the cloud or in a hybrid format,” said Jackson.

“This flexibility, and our teams’ ability to rapidly develop pre-processing modules, means we’re well-placed to deliver a highly efficient system able to process a wide range of complex data. Even with a document, like a pdf, there’s a wide range of embedded data that needs to be extracted. Aside from the text itself, data can often appear in tables, graphs, photographs and images.”

“AVIS is not designed to replace people – it’s a tool designed to do the heavy lifting of data processing, freeing up an analyst to focus on critical, high-value decision making. AI tools are not at the point where we can trust them explicitly,” added the company’s cofounder, Shefali Sharma.

“They can, however, significantly exceed the cognitive abilities of a human, so it’s about applying such technology in a smart way, freeing up humans to focus on decision making whilst staying firmly in control with an ability to verify everything the AI system is telling them.”

Event Logo

If you are interested in this article, why not register to attend our Think AI for Government conference, where digital leaders tackle the most pressing AI-related issues facing government today.


Register Now