The Meetween project was launched in response to a fundamental need: to make digital communication, and in particular virtual meetings, more inclusive, effective, and trustworthy. In recent years, online interaction has become an indispensable part of work, education, research, and public life. Yet, despite the ubiquity of videoconferencing tools, major barriers remain: linguistic diversity is often poorly supported, accessibility features are fragmented, and participants face persistent concerns around privacy, data protection, and the lack of transparency of the AI systems embedded in these platforms.
Against this backdrop, Meetween seeks to create an AI-powered mediation system that goes beyond conventional videoconferencing support. Its aim is to enable meetings where technology does not just passively transmit speech but actively mediates interaction in a way that is multilingual, multimodal, and ethically robust. The project combines the development of large multilingual models, the design of downstream applications such as real-time translation and summarisation, and the creation of intelligent assistants – Agentar and Butler – that can actively support meeting participants. At the same time, the project has placed equal emphasis on governance, transparency, and ethical safeguards, ensuring that innovation is developed in line with the principles of trustworthiness and accountability.
The overall objective is not merely technical excellence but impact: to provide Europe with a new generation of communication technologies that reflect its values of inclusivity, fairness, and respect for privacy. By demonstrating how AI can serve human needs while complying with evolving EU frameworks such as the AI Act and the Digital Decade strategy, Meetween aims to become a flagship example of how research can be translated into trustworthy innovation for society.