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China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

It's assumed that by 2047 machines computing ability will cross humans.

Interesting. Not 2047, not 2048, but precisely 2047. Is it going to be 00:00:00 of 01/01/2047 Greenwich time? And what the heck is "computing ability"?
 
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The Chinese government is funding a new lab from China's most powerful AI company
2017

Baidu, a Chinese tech giant making rapid advances in the field of artificial intelligence (AI), has received funding from the Chinese government for a new research project, Quartz reports.

https://www.businessinsider.com.au/...funded-by-chinese-government-2017-2?r=US&IR=T
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The Mobile Internet Is Over. Baidu Goes All In on AI
2017-03-16

The Chinese company has more than 1,300 people working on tech like deep learning.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...bile-internet-is-over-baidu-goes-all-in-on-ai
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Baidu Set to Open Second AI Lab in Silicon Valley
Mar 27, 2017 11:01 PM

Baidu’s new facility, called the Artificial Learning and Autonomous Driving Unit, will have 150 personnel and will be located less than a kilometer from its current research center in Sunnyvale, California, which has nearly 200 employees.

http://www.caixinglobal.com/2017-03-27/101071002.html
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Tencent increases its focus on artificial intelligence

Posted Mar 27, 2017

Tencent, best known for WeChat, China’s top messaging app, announced the lab last April. It said today that it has 50 AI specialists housed there. Aside from that development facility, Zhang — who received a PhD in Computer Science from Stanford and has worked at IBM and Yahoo — will lead a team of 200 product engineers..

https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/27/tencent-ai/
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Alibaba Cloud takes artificial intelligence to the masses

March 29, 2017

Alibaba Cloud, the cloud-computing arm of Alibaba Group, is making artificial intelligence (AI) technology more accessible to businesses and organizations with the debut of an upgraded machine-learning platform.

Called PAI 2.0, the platform, which launched in 2015, will “help customers easily deploy large-scale data mining and modeling,” Alibaba Cloud said in a statement. Machine learning is a branch of AI that gives computers the ability to absorb information, discern patterns in data and adapt to new input without explicit programming.

http://www.alizila.com/alibaba-cloud-wants-to-democratize-artificial-intelligence-technology/
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Baidu’s AI team taught a virtual agent just like a human would their baby
Posted 11 hours ago

Baidu’s artificial intelligence research team has achieved a significant milestone: teaching a virtual agent “living” in a 2D environment how to navigate its world using natural language commands, by first teaching it language through positive and negative reinforcement. The especially exciting thing, according to the scientists, is that the agent ended up developing a “zero-shot learning ability,” which essentially means that the AI agent developed a basic sense of grammar.

https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/30/b...ual-agent-just-like-a-human-would-their-baby/
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Audio transcription is finally being automated
Powered by artificial intelligence

Baidu (BIDU) has launched a transcription tool called SwiftScribe. The tool uses artificial intelligence to convert audio files into text, and it does this work incredibly quickly.

http://marketrealist.com/2017/03/what-value-can-swiftscribe-bring-to-baidu/
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Ford and Baidu invest $150 million into self-driving technology company Velodyne

Ford has teamed up with Chinese search giant — and Uber China investor — Baidu to lead a $150 million investment in lidar company Velodyne. Lidar — which uses laser technology to measure distance — is used to help autonomous vehicles navigate without a human

https://www.recode.net/2016/8/16/12500336/ford-baidu-investment-velodyne-self-driving-cars
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Baidu Buys Into NextEV NIO Electric Supercars And Autonomous Vehicles
March 21, 2017

Chinese search engine giant Baidu is jumping into the electric hypercar race after investing about $600 million in NextEV.

http://www.hybridcars.com/baidu-buys-into-nextev-nio-electric-supercars-and-autonomous-vehicles/
 
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The Chinese government is funding a new lab from China's most powerful AI company
2017

Baidu, a Chinese tech giant making rapid advances in the field of artificial intelligence (AI), has received funding from the Chinese government for a new research project, Quartz reports.

https://www.businessinsider.com.au/...funded-by-chinese-government-2017-2?r=US&IR=T
========================================================================

The Mobile Internet Is Over. Baidu Goes All In on AI
2017-03-16

The Chinese company has more than 1,300 people working on tech like deep learning.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...bile-internet-is-over-baidu-goes-all-in-on-ai
=======================================================================

Baidu Set to Open Second AI Lab in Silicon Valley
Mar 27, 2017 11:01 PM

Baidu’s new facility, called the Artificial Learning and Autonomous Driving Unit, will have 150 personnel and will be located less than a kilometer from its current research center in Sunnyvale, California, which has nearly 200 employees.

http://www.caixinglobal.com/2017-03-27/101071002.html
========================================================================

Tencent increases its focus on artificial intelligence

Posted Mar 27, 2017

Tencent, best known for WeChat, China’s top messaging app, announced the lab last April. It said today that it has 50 AI specialists housed there. Aside from that development facility, Zhang — who received a PhD in Computer Science from Stanford and has worked at IBM and Yahoo — will lead a team of 200 product engineers..

https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/27/tencent-ai/
========================================================================

Alibaba Cloud takes artificial intelligence to the masses

March 29, 2017

Alibaba Cloud, the cloud-computing arm of Alibaba Group, is making artificial intelligence (AI) technology more accessible to businesses and organizations with the debut of an upgraded machine-learning platform.

Called PAI 2.0, the platform, which launched in 2015, will “help customers easily deploy large-scale data mining and modeling,” Alibaba Cloud said in a statement. Machine learning is a branch of AI that gives computers the ability to absorb information, discern patterns in data and adapt to new input without explicit programming.

http://www.alizila.com/alibaba-cloud-wants-to-democratize-artificial-intelligence-technology/
========================================================================

Baidu’s AI team taught a virtual agent just like a human would their baby
Posted 11 hours ago

Baidu’s artificial intelligence research team has achieved a significant milestone: teaching a virtual agent “living” in a 2D environment how to navigate its world using natural language commands, by first teaching it language through positive and negative reinforcement. The especially exciting thing, according to the scientists, is that the agent ended up developing a “zero-shot learning ability,” which essentially means that the AI agent developed a basic sense of grammar.

https://techcrunch.com/2017/03/30/b...ual-agent-just-like-a-human-would-their-baby/
========================================================================

Audio transcription is finally being automated
Powered by artificial intelligence

Baidu (BIDU) has launched a transcription tool called SwiftScribe. The tool uses artificial intelligence to convert audio files into text, and it does this work incredibly quickly.

http://marketrealist.com/2017/03/what-value-can-swiftscribe-bring-to-baidu/
========================================================================

Ford and Baidu invest $150 million into self-driving technology company Velodyne

Ford has teamed up with Chinese search giant — and Uber China investor — Baidu to lead a $150 million investment in lidar company Velodyne. Lidar — which uses laser technology to measure distance — is used to help autonomous vehicles navigate without a human

https://www.recode.net/2016/8/16/12500336/ford-baidu-investment-velodyne-self-driving-cars
========================================================================

Baidu Buys Into NextEV NIO Electric Supercars And Autonomous Vehicles
March 21, 2017

Chinese search engine giant Baidu is jumping into the electric hypercar race after investing about $600 million in NextEV.

http://www.hybridcars.com/baidu-buys-into-nextev-nio-electric-supercars-and-autonomous-vehicles/

Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, the triopoly of future AI and IoT research.

Now it makes more sense why China protected these industries in their infancy.

There is still lots of room for development and others won't be sitting idle. Keep the Long March.
 
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Inspur to Unveil 2U 8-GPU AI Supercomputer at GTC 2017

NEWS PROVIDED BY

Inspur Electronic Information Industry Co., Ltd

08 May, 2017, 12:00 ET

SAN JOSE, May 8, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Inspur will unveil a new ultra-high density AI computing server, AGX-2, to accelerate Artificial Intelligence at the upcoming 2017 GPU Technology Conference (GTC2017). It is designed to provide maximum throughput for superior application performance for science and engineering computing, taking AI computing to the next level.

The AGX-2 will be unveiled at Inspur booth# 911 on May 10. It supports up to 8 NVIDIA® Tesla® P100 GPUs in a 2U form factor with NVIDIA® NVLink™ 2.0 enabled, providing faster, more efficient computing performance for a wide range of demanding applications and environments. The unique air cooling or air-liquid hybrid cooling design enables deployment of Green Datacenters with lower PUE.

Inspur keeps track of all the emerging intelligent computing technologies and applications, and is able to provide customers with the most complete GPU server product solutions that can support 2\4\8 GPU accelerators for a standalone system. Inspur and Baidu are also working together to develop an extendable SR-AI Rack Scale System designed to support 16 NVIDIA Tesla GPU Accelerators in a box. This powerful system can immediately shorten data processing time, visualize more data, accelerate deep learning frameworks, and design more sophisticated neural networks.

Inspur has been working with partners and customers around the world to help them accelerate solutions, automate operations, and gather better insights to make smarter decisions. In China, Inspur accounts for more than 60% of AI computing server market, and works closely with leading AI companies, such as Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, iFLYTEK, Qihoo 360, Sogou, Toutiao, and Face++, to achieve significant performance improvements for voice, image, video, search, networking and other applications.

Please visit us and attend our new product announcements and technical sessions to learn more about our cutting-edge AI computing hardware design and extensive product solutions.

http://www.prnewswire.com/news-rele...u-ai-supercomputer-at-gtc-2017-300452943.html

@Bussard Ramjet India?:D:lol:
 
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China sets up national lab developing AI technology

Xinhua, May 15, 2017

b8aeed9906a71a83439d01.jpg
China's first national laboratory for brain-like artificial intelligence (AI) technology is inaugurated Saturday in Hefei. [Photo/cnr.cn]

China's first national laboratory for brain-like artificial intelligence (AI) technology was inaugurated Saturday in Hefei, capital of East China's Anhui Province, to pool the country's top research talent and boost the technology.

Approved by the National Development and Reform Commission in January, the lab, based in China University of Science and Technology (USTC), aims to develop a brain-like computing paradigm and applications.

The university, known for its leading role in developing quantum communication technology, hosts the national lab in collaboration with a number of the country's top research bodies such as Fudan University, Shenyang Institute of Automation of the Chinese Academy of Sciences as well as Baidu, operator of China's biggest online search engine.

Wan Lijun, president of USTC and chairman of the national lab, said the ability to mimic the human brain's ability in sorting out information will help build a complete AI technology development paradigm.

The lab will carry out research to guide machine learning such as recognizing messages and using visual neural networks to solve problems. It will also focus on developing new applications with technological achievements.

http://www.china.org.cn/china/2017-05/15/content_40814490.htm
 
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a1ff8b10-ea78-11e5-9451-ef5010d885b7_image_hires.jpg

@Bussard Ramjet

China to Develop Cambrian AI Chip That Simulates Human Brain

Read more: http://www.telegiz.com/articles/204...fineart-tencent-deep-zen-go.htm#ixzz4hA2NRDNk
The Cambrian chip "is expected to be the world's first processor that simulates human nerve cells and synapses to conduct deep learning,"

:rolleyes:
japan is the definition of ai and korea is not bad either. korean team smashed everyone not long ago in darpa robotics competition where google also took part in.
Bussards knows everything. From quantum computing to AI.... even China respects Japan is terms of robotics AI.
 
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Baofeng bets on AI for the future of TV industry
By Zhao Tingting | chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2017-05-11

d8cb8a14fbeb1a7e47a32b.jpg

Liu Yaoping, CEO of Baofeng TV, speaks at the launch ceremony for the new X5 ECHO in Beijing on May 10, 2017. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]


Baofeng TV, the TV arm of Baofeng Group Co Ltd, a Beijing-based internet entertainment and video company, launched an artificial intelligence (AI) TV in Beijing on Wednesday.

"We have always insisted on combining the technology and human insight, and offering the best products and services," said Liu Yaoping, CEO of Baofeng TV, which was established two years ago.

The Baofeng AI TV, dubbed X5 ECHO, is the first device to provide far-field voice interaction between human and machine.

"We hope TV sets can change people's lifestyle and business model like what the smartphone did. The newly released product is not only a TV with interactive functions, but also a household AI assistant, providing services actively," Liu added.

Differentiating from normal TV sets, X5 ECHO can be turned on immediately when the user calls the name of the AI assistant - Baofeng Big Ears - instead of using the remote control.

The new product allows the AI assistant to handle users' behavioral data through cloud computing and algorithms.

X5 ECHO provides a variety of AI services, such as video content services, life services, TV video chat, as well as an entertainment and education platform for children.

Equipped with 4k ultra HD large screen and 4K HDR technology, Baofeng AI TV can support MEMC dynamic compensation technology, as well as Baofeng's patented left eye engine technology, increasing video clarity by 30 percent.

Presale of X5 ECHO started on the official website of Baofeng TV, JD.com, Tmall's flagship store and Suning's flagship store, at 7,999 yuan for the 65-inch model, 5,999 yuan for the 58-inch model, 4,999 yuan for the 55-inch model and 3,999 yuan for the 50-inch model.
 
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Artificial intelligence viewed as next big thing in tech but also an ethical challenge


PUBLISHED : Friday, 19 May, 2017, 8:36am
UPDATED : Friday, 19 May, 2017, 9:02am

The all-seeing God’s Eye, a system that can hack into any camera and locate anyone, anywhere in less than four minutes is one of the stars of the two latest instalments of the Fast and Furious blockbuster movie franchise.

In China’s most innovative city, Shenzhen, two US-educated Chinese scientists have found a way to turn part of God’s Eye into reality – if the authorities allow them to insert a tiny chip into surveillance cameras.

With the chip, a surveillance camera can greatly speed up human facial recognition and spot a criminal suspect in a crowd in just a few seconds. It has proved effective in at least in one district in Shenzhen and, according to publicly disclosed information, has helped police crack hundreds of cases and find a number of lost children.

The firm, Intellifusion, is just one of the fruits of China’s efforts to become a global leader in artificial intelligence (AI), a technology that may profoundly change everyday life and that promises massive financial pay-offs.

China’s AI ambitions were emphasised at the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress in March and the message was not lost on the country’s biggest tech companies.

Beijing’s efforts to close the innovation gap with the United States have since been given a big boost, with billions of dollars invested in AI laboratories and projects.
Beijing to release national artificial intelligence development plan

Baidu president Zhang Yaqin says his company, China’s equivalent of Google, invests more than 15 per cent of its revenue in research and development every year, much of it on AI. It set up a national deep-learning technology lab in Beijing in March, drawing on the talents of its own AI experts and others from Tsinghua University, Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics and the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology.

Messaging and gaming behemoth Tencent recruited the former head of Baidu’s Big Data Lab, Zhang Tong, last month to lead a team of more than 50 AI scientists and 200 engineers at its AI lab, which focuses on computer vision, voice recognition, natural language processing and machine learning. Its AI Go program Yueyi won the Computer Go UEC Cup in Japan in March.

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AI’s potential was demonstrated in January when DeepMind’s AlphaGo, playing under the name “Master”, won 51 online Go matches against some of the world’s best players. Go, a game at least 300 times more difficult than chess, is viewed as a good test of artificial intelligence because of its many permutations and combinations of moves. AlphaGo will be taking on the world’s top-ranked player, China’s Ke Jie, in a best-of-three series in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province, next week.

According to recent research by UBS, AI could produce economic value of between US$1.8 trillion and US$3 trillion a year by 2030 in Asia─by introducing new product services and categories, cost savings arising from better products, lower overall prices and improvements in lifestyles.

Data provider i-Research predicts China’s AI market will be worth US$ 9.1 billion in 2020 after growing at an annual compound rate of 50 per cent.

Artificial intelligence given priority development status

That’s been encouraging growing numbers of overseas-trained Chinese researchers to flock back to the mainland to explore AI opportunities and industrialise their technologies.

China, with US$2.6 billion, ranked second globally in terms of investment in AI enterprises and start-ups last year, sandwiched between the US on US$17.9 billion and Britain on US$ 800 million, according to data from China’s WuZhen Institute think tank.

Intellifusion, a start-up founded in Shenzhen three years ago by two Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) experts – Chen Ning and Tian Dihong – who returned to the mainland from the United States, is one of the firms breaking new ground.

“The mainland market is the best choice in the world for talented research scientists to bring their AI technology from lab to life and make it possible for scalable AI products,” Chen said, while acknowledging there were more developed AI technologies and more experienced AI talent in the US.

“While there’s no doubt artificial intelligence is the new frontier, the foundation for the technology is still not mature.”

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The winner would not be the one with the best algorithm, Chen said, but the one with the most data.

“In the AI sector, China is a fast starter,” he said. “The mainland market, with its huge population, means you can launch AI products quicker, collect more data and upgrade your algorithm faster, and then lower your cost to compete for bigger market share.”

US-based GPU maker Nvidia predicts there will be a billion surveillance cameras watching people around the world by 2020, presenting the massive challenge of working out exactly how to deal with that giant deluge of data.

That’s where an “intelligent chip” designed by Chen and Tian’s company, Intellifusion, stands to cash in.

Artificial intelligence could put as many as 50m Asian jobs at risk over next 15-20 years: UBS study

The authorities in Shenzhen, dubbed China’s Silicon Valley, have invested in the start-up and given it other support. But some people have expressed concern about the privacy implications of the technology.

Around 100,000 public surveillance cameras across the city will be using Intellifusion’s chips by the end of this year. They enable police to identify an individual in just a second or two from a database of about 300 million people and most surveillance cameras in Shenzhen will be fitted with them by next year.

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Chen and Tian worked together at the Georgia Institute of Technology’s Centre for Signal and Image Processing 15 to 16 years ago. Their company now employs around 100 people.

Chief executive Chen, 42, said Intellifusion’s chip was much more effective than the traditional CPU (central processing unit) and GPU (graphics processing unit) chips.

“An effective front-end AI-powered chip for visual intelligence is a must in future, to make the machines not only see the world, but also understand the world and conduct local real-time processing,” Chen said. “Our chips in cameras can preprocess video data, detect and extract targeted facial characteristics, and translate them into arrays of binary data, which are uploaded to the cloud for final processing.”

Chinese firms fight to lure top artificial intelligence talent from Silicon Valley

Chen and Tian, who specialises in visual computing and led tech teams at Samsung and Cisco, decided in 2014 to resign from American tech giant employers and return to Shenzhen to start their own AI business.

Their decision, reached after two days of conversation, paid off the next year when they won an innovation competition for international talent under Shenzhen’s Peacock Plan, an ambitious city government programme to recruit and support top hi-tech researchers. They attracted more than 40 million yuan (US$6.3 million) in funding and subsidies from the Shenzhen authorities in 2015.

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That success boosted their national profile and Intellifusion’s products are now used in more than 10 Chinese provinces and also in Malaysia.

In its A-round financing in March last year the start-up attracted US dollar investment in the eight-figure range from Chinese venture capital funds.

“Top-level Chinese AI experts are rich in advantageous resources in the mainland market,” said eSight Technology founder Dr Huang Bufu. With a PhD in mechanical design and automation from the Chinese University of Hong Kong, he’s founded a start-up in Shenzhen focusing on machine vision development for industrial robots in Pearl River Delta factories.

China’s artificial intelligence sector in danger of becoming a ‘bubble’, experts warn

Huang said his company, with about 20 staff, had completed its first round of financing, with investment from several mainland venture capital funds.

“Based in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen, AI start-ups can reach various venture funds across the country and benefit from preferential policies from local government, not only for the projects and start-ups, but also for the human resources,” he said.

Huang said several friends who had earned PhDs in Hong Kong had decided to follow him across the border to explore the opportunities for AI start-ups on the mainland.

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The flood of investment into AI on the mainland has spurred calls for public debate on the ethical and moral implications of technology such as robots, cameras with “brains” and autonomous cars.

“While governments make Intellifusion’s chips a hi-tech showcase in the cities, arming public surveillance cameras to make the cities safer, the rights to privacy of the citizens they track must not be forgotten,” said Wang Cairong, secretary general of the China Artificial Intelligence Robot Industry Alliance.

China’s first ‘deep learning lab’ intensifies challenge to US in artificial intelligence race

Chen said the AI tide could not be turned back, but better rules were needed.

“The governments and scientists need to sit down together to think carefully about how to revise current rules and laws for AI development,” he said. “In the future, the laws and the ethical rules will not just be for human beings, but also for human-computer interaction.”
 
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Alex Konrad ,

FORBES STAFF

Staff writer for venture capital, startups and enterprise tech.


This story appears in the June 2017 issue of Forbes Asia. Subscribe
kai-fu.jpg

David Yellen for Forbes

Kai-Fu Lee sees America as destined to lose to China in the race for leadership in AI.

Kai-Fu Lee watched the U.S. beat China to global internet leadership during the dot-com bubble from the inside. Now with what he sees as an even greater technological revolution taking place in the fast-growing field of artificial intelligence, Lee doesn't expect China to take a backseat a second time. "China started slow, and American companies went international," Lee says during a May visit to Forbes Media's headquarters. "But simple math says China has a larger GDP. The market will be bigger."

When Lee talks about AI, he speaks from firsthand experience. The Taiwan native developed the first speaker-independent phone recognition program as a Ph.D. student at Carnegie Mellon in the late 1980s, before stints at Apple and as an executive at Microsoft and Google in China--in fact, he was founding president of Google China.

Google and its peers were ultimately thwarted in their ambitions to carve out leadership stakes in the Chinese market, in part due to cultural differences among consumers as well as privacy clashes with the Chinese government. When Lee returned from working at Google's Mountain View, California, headquarters to launch his own VC fund, Sinovation Ventures, he came back to a China firmly entrenched in what he now describes as a duopolistic global tech economy. U.S. internet software continued to lead the English-speaking world, while a group of ?Chinese companies, famously led by Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent (B-A-T), controlled their domestic market and exerted increasing influence in Southeast Asia and developing markets.

With companies on both sides of the Pacific racing to develop applications of AI, China's scale can prove a decisive advantage, Lee believes. The country boasts perhaps 43% of the world's trained AI scientists, Lee says, with Microsoft alone training about 50,000 Chinese scientists in processes critical to the field starting in 1998. Overall, this doesn't represent the cream of talent in the field--that is still found in the U.S., Canada and Britain, he says--but China's legions are good.

China's political leadership continues to invest heavily in research and technology. And developers may not face the same regulation when it comes to pushing real-world trials, such as with autonomous vehicles, or in mass data collection that would be viewed as intrusive or a privacy violation in the West.

In driverless cars, the U.S. has about a two-year head start, according to Lee. But each minute American tech companies find themselves mired in a regulatory battle or hobbled by objections from transportation incumbents, the Chinese can close that gap.
What's more, he says, top-down rule in China will countenance a long stretch of data-gathering experience in which the casualty rates from autonomous-vehicle use steadily drop--by orders of magnitude, Lee hypothesizes. Even relatively safe records may not pass muster in democracies.

Not only do Chinese companies have the advantage of a hyper-competitive market in which the leading players typically compete across a range of applications and use cases (compared with more specialized leaders in the U.S.), the Chinese government continues to invest in R&D while unstable visa policies could encourage more academics to return to China after attending universities in the U.S. Even a language barrier can work in China's favor: Baidu's recently departed AI chief Andrew Ng told The Atlantic in February: "China has a fairly deep awareness of what's happening in the English-speaking world, but the opposite is not true."

Lee's odds on China are contested by at least one top American voice in the field. "The leading AI researchers, university departments and research labs are still in the U.S.," says Oren Etzioni, CEO of Seattle's Allen Institute for Artificial Intelligence. "However, China is moving fast. As long as we continue to have an open society and strong immigration, we will remain ahead."

The race to AI leadership is crucial because what we know as AI will greatly exceed direct technological applications, Lee argues. Industries ranging from banking to insurance, health care and media will all face massive transformations from automation. Lee is fond of telling the story of how he pitted his personal banker against computer-run trading algorithms. The machines produced a return that was eight times better. "Anything with a feedback loop will give way to AI," Lee says. That could include scanning hundreds of insurance claims or mortgage applications, shipping orders and even evaluating patient X-rays. "In most cases it's okay to be mostly accurate," says Lee.

The small comfort for logistics managers, doctors and mortgage officers: a tiny percentage--Lee guesses about 10%--of decisions will remain so mission-critical or life-and-death that a company can't take the chance the machine is wrong or its communications are off. "Robotics can fake some empathy, but compassion isn't there," Lee says. "With 10% wrong, you can still lose all trust."

Even near accuracy would still mean a massive displacement of workers, pushing the jobs to managerial or quality-control roles or putting a "last mile" human face on interactions. Lee and his team frequently invoke a 2013 Oxford research paper by Carl Benedikt Frey and Michael A. Osborne that predicted that 47% of jobs in the U.S. economy would be threatened by automation. Lee is not impressed by recent developments such as Facebook's announcement that it would hire 3,000 moderators to help its systems flag and take down inappropriate videos. "That's a tiny number," he says. "Look at what percent of global internet users Facebook is reaching" relative to the number of people who will be paid to monitor them, he says. "It's noise."

The rising AI economy, meanwhile, won't look like the B-A-T companies or the de facto American hegemony of Apple, Facebook, Microsoft and Google. Lee believes the AI economy will be spread out across practices within tech companies and large corporations as well as sold as a contract service by specialists. Through his $1.2 billion fund--building to $2 billion--Lee is investing in applications that can benefit from AI, including, in America, SuperFlex, a company building exosuits for disabled and elderly people, and Wonder Workshop, which makes robots to teach children computer science. (He's skeptical about humanistic service robots like Softbank's Pepper, however.)

Lee says he's investing about 95% in China and only 5% in the U.S. One brutal reality of training any machine-learning program, he notes, is that the more the system processes information, the better trained it gets, meaning the more it's used the smarter and more accurate it gets. And no research hub has more users at its fingertips than China. Says Lee: "Whoever has the most data wins."

Follow Alex on Forbes, Twitter and Facebook for more coverage of startups, enterprise software and venture capital.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexkonrad/2017/05/30/kai-fu-lee-sees-china-ai-advantage/#3525da351969
 
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Metrics Stack Up To Prove China's Tech Innovation Progress
If current trends continue, China is on track to become the world's latest filer for patent applications, surpassing the U.S., which still leads by a good but diminishing margin. So concludes a recent report from the World Intellectual Property Organization, which tracks patent statistics globally each year.

Indeed, China has posted double-digit gains in patent filings each year since 2012 -- and last year was a record increase of 45% to 43,168 applications for patents. It wasn't long ago that China barely showed up on the patent charts. But last year, two of China's tech titans were the top filers in the world -- ZTE and Huawei.

This is hardly the only indicator of China's progress as a tech innovator, from made in China to invented in China, over the past decade.

By several metrics, China is gaining. China has the world's largest number of mobile and Internet users. At last count Internet users stack up to 688 million or about one-half the population while smart phone users climbed to 422 million or one-third the populace.

Moreover, China's venture capital now stands as the world's second-largest. In 2016, VC investment in China amounted to $32 billion -- up from $27.5 billion in 2015 -- or almost half as much as the U.S. at 69 billion last year.
Additionally, China has its fair share of unicorn-valued startups. China claims 23% share of the world's unicorns (compared with the U.S. at 54% and India at 4%). Chinese ride sharing service Didi, which acquired Uber's China's business, is ranked second among the world's top unicorns.

As further signs, China's leading tech brands Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent are going global and bringing their innovations and capital to the West.

Areas where China is gaining an advantage are artificial intelligence, virtual reality, robotics, fintech and mobile communications and payments. This is a long way from low-cost manufacturer.

Things that are popular and more advanced in China include shared bicycles, VR cafes, mobile payment and mobile commerce.

Turning to the highest valuations for companies in the world, China counts four among the top 10: Tencent, Baidu, Alibaba and Ant Financial.

China's leading mobile messaging service WeChat is used now by nearly 900 million globally, and it's starting to catch on among those outside China. One-third of the users of WeChat also used WeChat payment to make purchases. Who carries a wallet today in China?

Finally, on a score of the most innovative nations in the world, China has just joined the list of top 25, as measured by a Global Innovation Index compiled by the WIPO, Cornell University and INSEAD.

Despite a slowing economy, debt issues, an aging population and pollution problems, China's tech scene is clearly maintaining its vibrancy in urban areas, tech parks, co-working spaces and college campuses.



Rebecca A. Fannin is founder/editor of news and events group Silicon Dragon, author of three books on innovation trends, and a contributor to Forbes, CNBC and special reports.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/rebecc...chinas-tech-innovation-progress/#21fb4d05536d
 
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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-baidu-autonomous-idUSKBN18S68Q

Baidu’s new text-to-speech system can master hundreds of accents
And it can do it with just half an hour of audio training
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Baidu is acquiring xPerception, a US startup focused on computer vision
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AI robot to sit China's college entrance exam
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AI robot to sit China's college entrance exam

017-06-02 08:44

Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

Are artificial intelligence robots smart enough to sit the gaokao, China's national college entrance exam?

This year, an AI robot will take the math test of the gaokao, the country's famously difficult college entrance exam, which will kick off on June 7.

The robot AI-MATHS was developed by an AI company in the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu.

AI-MATHS will answer different paper versions of the math test over two hours on the test day.

In February, the robot scored 93 on one math test, slightly higher than the passing grade of 90.

"We have been working to improve its performance in logical reasoning and computer algorithms in the past year," said Lin Hui, CEO of the AI firm Chengdu Zhunxingyunxue Technology.

China's Ministry of Science and Technology has announced a plan to develop gaokao robots. Under the plan, by 2020, AI robots will be smart enough to gain admission to leading universities through the entrance exam.:o::D

http://www.ecns.cn/2017/06-02/259858.shtml
 
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