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China hit the tracks in the generative AI race with Alibaba and Baidu

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China hit the tracks in the generative AI race with Alibaba and Baidu​

Shortly after Baidu announced it is currently testing its ‘Ernie Bot,’ reports surfaced that Alibaba is also doing the same among its employees.
10 February 2023

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China has invested, and continues to invest heavily in the three “battlegrounds” for technological superiority: semiconductors, artificial intelligence (AI) and 5G – sectors that are closely monitored by the US as well. In fact, the two countries have been in an AI arms race for years, and China has outnumbered the US in terms of the most-cited scientific papers on AI to date. However, it wasn’t until ChatGPT’s eruption into the world that tech giants in China began publicly revealing their interest in generative AI.

Although giants like Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent have been investing heavily in long-term research projects and laboratories since the birth of China’s AI sector, progress has been scaled back due to new regulations ideally suited to the emergence of generative AI. Still, in many ways, the national conversation about ChatGPT in China is similar to the one being had in the US and Europe – companies are still finding their feet within the generative AI space.

The wave started in the United States (US) after OpenAI’s ChatGPT was launched in December last year. Since that, there has not been a day without an announcement regarding a technology company’s moves into the generative AI space. This week, Chinese technology companies have started signaling that they, too, are making a dent in the generative AI space.

Shortly after Microsoft and Google announced their intention to up their ante in their search engine game, China’s internet giant Baidu announced the same. Baidu is China’s answer to Google – so the company’s foray into the generative AI space would mean the search engine industry may well be reshaped by AI, in ways perhaps unfathomable a decade ago.

Less than a day later, Jack Ma’s e-commerce giant Alibaba announced that it too was working on a tool similar to ChatGPT. So far, Alibaba is the only e-commerce giant in the world to make a foray into the generative AI chatbot space. An Alibaba spokesperson confirmed Wednesday morning that the company is now conducting internal tests on its generative AI chatbot.

An e-commerce giant with a generative AI chatbot?​

ChatGPT is designed to assist in tasks ranging from summarizing information to generating some of its own. It has been a much-hyped generative AI chatbot because of its ability to churn out convincingly fluent text since it is a version of GPT-3, a large language model also developed by OpenAI. Language models are a type of neural network that has been trained on lots and lots of text.

When OpenAI launched GPT-3, its third large language model, it made jaws drop. Its ability to generate human-like text was a big leap forward. Not only that, “GPT-3 can answer questions, summarize documents, generate stories in different styles, translate between English, French, Spanish, and Japanese, and more. Its mimicry is uncanny,” an article by MIT Technology Review reads.

Alibaba said the company has been focused on large language models and generative AI since 2017 and is in the middle of internal testing. Alibaba hasn’t said how it would put the AI to work, but a local newspaper report said that the company might combine the technology with the group’s communication app DingTalk.

Alibaba also has its fingers in numerous other fields ranging from cloud computing to finance, and in a recent blog posting by Alibaba Cloud, Luica Mak, Director of Corporate Affairs, shared that “In the next two to three years, we think the application and services of generative AI will be more inclusive.” Even Alibaba Group’s research institute, DAMO Academy, has stated generative AI as one of the top 10 tech trends for the year ahead.

Generative AI: The next frontier in the tech battle between the US and China?​

There are no doubts that generative AI has become the center of the power struggle, especially between the US and China. Although both nations have reached parity in the development of AI, China’s implementation of the technology in products and services was expected to be ahead – until Big Tech in the US began exploring ChatGPT-like technology. Although most organizations’ explorations in the space is at a fairly nascent stage, it will be interesting to see how this plays out for both economic powerhouses.

 
I was wondering when a propoganda piece on Chinese generative AI will come now that ChatGPT has become the talk of the town.

what 'battle between US and China?'. US is the only one in the race.

Generative AI: The next frontier in the tech battle between the US and China?​

 

China’s JD.Com will launch ChatGPT-like product called ChatJD, Retail News, ET Retail​

Feburary. 10 2023

Chinas-JDCom-will-launch-ChatGPT-like-product-called-ChatJD-Retail-News-810x424.jpg

Chinese e-commerce company JD.Com Inc’s unit JD Cloud will launch a product similar to ChatGPT called ChatJD that will be targeted at other businesses, the company said on Friday, reported news agency Reuters

There has been a lot of interest in generative AI since OpenAI’s ChatGPT went live last year. Another Chinese tech giant Baidu said it would finish internal testing of its own ChatGPT-style AI chatbot called ‘Ernie Bot’ in March, joining tech companies around the world in the race to develop generative AI technology.

Ernie, meaning “Enhanced Representation through Knowledge Integration,” is a large AI-powered language model introduced in 2019, Baidu said. It has gradually grown to be able to perform tasks including language understanding, language generation, and text-to-image generation, it added.

Google, the world’s largest search engine, will make artificial intelligence-based large language models like LaMDA available “in the coming weeks and months”, according to chief executive officer Sundar Pichai.

OpenAI on February 1, launched a paid version of ChatGPT. The subscription include features such as general access to ChatGPT, even during peak times; faster response times; priority access to new features and improvements.

The paid version of the AI chatbot can be availed for $20 per month.

Currently, ChatGPT Plus is available only to users in the United States. OpenAI said it will begin the process of inviting people waitlist over the coming weeks.
“We plan to expand access and support to additional countries and regions soon,” the company said in a post.

Bard’s costly mistake
Alphabet’s shares tanked more than 9% during regular trading on Thursday, wiping off $100 billion off of its market cap, after a report emerged pointing to a factual error made by its newly launched AI chatbot Bard.

The error was highlighted in a report by news agency Reuters.

The company posted a GIF of its new AI Bard in action which showed the chatbot giving a factually inaccurate response to a prompt.

In the GIF, the chatbot is prompted, “What new discoveries from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) can I tell my 9-year old about?”

Bard responded with a number of answers, including one suggesting the JWST was used to take the very first pictures of a planet outside the Earth’s solar system, or exoplanets.
This is where it went wrong as the first pictures of exoplanets were, however, taken by the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in 2004, as confirmed by NASA.
 

China’s JD.Com will launch ChatGPT-like product called ChatJD, Retail News, ET Retail​

Feburary. 10 2023

Chinas-JDCom-will-launch-ChatGPT-like-product-called-ChatJD-Retail-News-810x424.jpg

Chinese e-commerce company JD.Com Inc’s unit JD Cloud will launch a product similar to ChatGPT called ChatJD that will be targeted at other businesses, the company said on Friday, reported news agency Reuters

There has been a lot of interest in generative AI since OpenAI’s ChatGPT went live last year. Another Chinese tech giant Baidu said it would finish internal testing of its own ChatGPT-style AI chatbot called ‘Ernie Bot’ in March, joining tech companies around the world in the race to develop generative AI technology.

Ernie, meaning “Enhanced Representation through Knowledge Integration,” is a large AI-powered language model introduced in 2019, Baidu said. It has gradually grown to be able to perform tasks including language understanding, language generation, and text-to-image generation, it added.

Google, the world’s largest search engine, will make artificial intelligence-based large language models like LaMDA available “in the coming weeks and months”, according to chief executive officer Sundar Pichai.

OpenAI on February 1, launched a paid version of ChatGPT. The subscription include features such as general access to ChatGPT, even during peak times; faster response times; priority access to new features and improvements.

The paid version of the AI chatbot can be availed for $20 per month.

Currently, ChatGPT Plus is available only to users in the United States. OpenAI said it will begin the process of inviting people waitlist over the coming weeks.
“We plan to expand access and support to additional countries and regions soon,” the company said in a post.

Bard’s costly mistake
Alphabet’s shares tanked more than 9% during regular trading on Thursday, wiping off $100 billion off of its market cap, after a report emerged pointing to a factual error made by its newly launched AI chatbot Bard.

The error was highlighted in a report by news agency Reuters.

The company posted a GIF of its new AI Bard in action which showed the chatbot giving a factually inaccurate response to a prompt.

In the GIF, the chatbot is prompted, “What new discoveries from the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) can I tell my 9-year old about?”

Bard responded with a number of answers, including one suggesting the JWST was used to take the very first pictures of a planet outside the Earth’s solar system, or exoplanets.
This is where it went wrong as the first pictures of exoplanets were, however, taken by the European Southern Observatory’s Very Large Telescope (VLT) in 2004, as confirmed by NASA.

So basically you're going to feed Chinese content into transformers model and train it.
 

 
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I find these chatbots highly rudimentary. Unless someone is super lazy, I see no use for these. These are good for party tricks, nothing more. Siri is an idiot, google assistant is marginally better but I never use any of these stuff in any mobile I had. No wonder Alexa has been bleeding billions for Amazon.
 

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