Called endangeredlanguages.com, it is out to help improve the exchange of digital source materials in languages spoken by small numbers of people, from Navajo in the United States, to Aragonese in Spain, to Koro in India and Burunge in Tanzania.
"It is an open, on-line platform where anybody can get on and start sharing materials in those languages which are in danger of being lost," said Miguel Alba, Google's Mexico marketing chief.
"Today there are around 7,000 languages spoken around the world, but half of them are expected not to survive to the end of this century," Alba said.
It is hoped that the languages will get an extra dose of energy as users share texts, videos, photos and audio files.
"Generally languages that are threatened are being abandoned by their own speakers as they are not seen as positive and speakers instead opt for another language seen as more economically or socially advantageous, said anthropologist Francisco Barriga.
Catch the latest from the Consumer Electronics Show on Gadgets 360, at our CES 2026 hub.
OnePlus Phone With 6.59-Inch Display and 8,000mAh Battery in Development, Tipster Claims
Ubisoft Announces Layoffs at The Division and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora Studio, Massive Entertainment