SUBSCRIBE
Tech Journal Now
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
  • More Articles
Reading: Ai2’s Skylight project launches ‘Shippy,’ an AI agent that dives into ocean data – GeekWire
Share
Tech Journal NowTech Journal Now
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • AI
  • Best Buy
  • Games
  • Software
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Reviews
  • Guides
  • Best Buy
  • Software
  • Games
  • More Articles
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Tech Journal Now > News > Ai2’s Skylight project launches ‘Shippy,’ an AI agent that dives into ocean data – GeekWire
News

Ai2’s Skylight project launches ‘Shippy,’ an AI agent that dives into ocean data – GeekWire

News Room
Last updated: June 8, 2026 10:53 pm
News Room
Share
3 Min Read
SHARE

by Todd Bishop on Jun 8, 2026 at 2:57 pmJune 8, 2026 at 2:57 pm

Skylight’s new Shippy AI agent answers a plain-language question about vessels in Seattle’s harbor, showing a breakdown of vessel types alongside a map of the area. (Skylight Image)

Skylight, the free ocean-monitoring platform built by Seattle’s Allen Institute for AI (Ai2), launched an AI agent that gives maritime analysts answers to plain-language questions about what’s happening across the world’s oceans, from illegal fishing to vessels that have gone dark.

The agent, dubbed Shippy, runs on Skylight’s live vessel-tracking and satellite data, with every answer linking back to the underlying records so analysts can verify and reproduce it.

Skylight is one of a group of environmental projects that moved in 2021 to Ai2 from Vulcan Inc., now known as Vale Group, the late Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen’s holding company.

Researchers at Skylight have spent years building tools to spot illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing, which it says accounts for billions of dollars in losses each year and hits developing countries that depend on their fisheries the hardest. The platform is free, and Skylight says it is used by more than 300 organizations across about 70 countries.

It combines free satellite data with commercial imagery and vessel-tracking feeds to flag suspicious behavior, such as a ship going dark or two vessels meeting at sea to transfer catch.

Ai2 has open-sourced the computer-vision models behind the project.

Like Skylight itself, Shippy will be free to governments, regional fisheries bodies and qualifying nonprofits. For now it is limited to a small group of agencies and partners, with Skylight planning to expand access to a broader community of users as it updates and improves the tool.

Skylight says it built in limits to keep the agent useful and accountable. Shippy sticks to maritime questions, presents facts without making legal judgments, declines defense-related requests, and stops rather than guess when a question runs past what its data can answer. Decisions such as where to send a patrol, the team says, stay with “the humans in the room.”

The launch reflects a broader shift at Ai2 toward applying AI to specific real-world problems. Former CEO Ali Farhadi and other researchers left earlier this year to join Microsoft, as the Ai2 board reconsidered whether the nonprofit should be trying to go toe-to-toe with heavily funded tech giants in developing advanced AI models.

Read the full article here

You Might Also Like

Amazon payments to Bezos’ Blue Origin reach $1.8B as shareholders cite conflicts of interest – GeekWire

T-Mobile enlists Starlink satellites for new ‘SuperBroadband’ business internet service  – GeekWire

The Virgin Unicorns – GeekWire

Solara, Scout, AI models, GitHub’s woes and more with Mary Jo Foley – GeekWire

Interlune wins $6.9M NASA award to extract gases from moon dirt – GeekWire

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

- Advertisement -
Ad image

Trending Stories

Games

No, Blade is not cancelled, Arkane artist confirms

June 8, 2026
Games

Derelict Star review | PC Gamer

June 8, 2026
Games

A Star Trek horror game is just wild enough to work, but not the one Bloober Team is making

June 8, 2026
AI

Did Apple make the AI grade this year? – Computerworld

June 8, 2026
Games

15 minutes is all you need in this roguelike action RPG to feel like a maxed-out Diablo god laying waste to an entire screen of monsters

June 8, 2026
Games

5 cozy game demos I’m downloading right now after I counted a whole 37 dropping during Summer Game Fest weekend

June 8, 2026

Always Stay Up to Date

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Follow US on Social Media

Facebook Youtube Steam Twitch Unity

2024 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.

Tech Journal Now

Quick Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?