According to a recent LinkedIn post from Turing, the company has worked with a large government agency to implement a secure, multilingual AI assistant aimed at improving access to internal knowledge. The assistant reportedly serves both Arabic and English speakers and is positioned as a more secure alternative to public AI tools for internal queries.
Claim 55% Off TipRanks
- Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions
- Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks
The post suggests that this deployment reduced query resolution time from hours to minutes and unified access across previously fragmented internal repositories. It also indicates that the project began as a 500-employee pilot, implying potential room for scale within the agency and, by extension, similar institutions.
For investors, the engagement points to Turing’s focus on operational AI use cases within highly regulated, security-sensitive environments such as government. Demonstrated support for right-to-left language and multilingual workflows may strengthen the firm’s competitive positioning in international and public-sector markets.
If replicated across other agencies or large enterprises, similar deployments could translate into recurring revenue streams and higher switching costs given the integration into everyday workflows. The emphasis on “real enterprise AI,” as described in the post, aligns Turing with the broader trend toward AI-driven internal productivity gains rather than purely external-facing applications.

