Mozilla had already tried to get a (cloud-based) web content translation feature into Firefox a few years before Project Bergamot, but had failed because of the financial challenge.
Microsoft had already delivered offline capabilities for its translation software in 2018.
Google soon followed suit,
Apple two years later. The software is based on the free translation framework
Marian, which the University of Edinburgh had previously developed in cooperation with Microsoft, and is itself based on the Nematus toolkit that was presented in 2017. Under the leadership of the
University of Edinburgh, a development consortium was formed with the
Mozilla Corporation and the additional European universities of
Prague,
Sheffield and
Tartu. In 2018, it was able to get 3 million euros of funding from the EU's
Horizon 2020 programme. Firefox Translations was initially provided as an add-on. A first functional demonstration prototype was presented in October 2019. Beta version 117 had the feature integrated directly into the browser, the official release was in version 118 from September 2023. Both the add-on module and as part of Firefox, the code and the models are subject to the version 2 of the
Mozilla Public License. Since 2022, the EU-funded HPLT project creates new language models. It involves additional partners, including the universities of
Helsinki,
Turku,
Oslo and other partners from Spain, Norway and the Czech Republic. == References ==