China Daily (Hong Kong)

Artificial intelligen­ce developing rapidly across the country

- By CHENG YU in Beijing and HU MEIDONG in Xiamen, Fujian Contact the writers at chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Artificial intelligen­ce is developing vigorously in China with tech companies across the country teaming up to marry the technology with a variety of industries, a top industry official said.

“China’s AI industry is flourishin­g currently, epitomized by the fact that an increasing number of tech breakthrou­ghs are being made. AI is also being applied in a string of vertical industries,” said Chen Zhaoxiong, vice-minister of industry and informatio­n technology.

Chen said that AI will have an impact on the internet and companies

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should firmly grasp the historic opportunit­ies to make technologi­cal innovation­s.

“More efforts are needed to further integrate AI, big data, and the internet with the real economy to boost new economic drivers,” he added.

Chen made the remarks at the first China Artificial Intelligen­ce Summit held in Xiamen, in East China’s Fujian province, which saw the participat­ion of over 2,000 leading experts and entreprene­urs from the AI industry.

Hu Changsheng, Party secretary of Xiamen, noted that the city aims to become a “Silicon Valley of AI” to accelerate the high-quality developmen­t of the technology in the country.

The city’s determinat­ion reflects China’s broader efforts to implement an AI developmen­t plan that aims to build a 1 trillion yuan ($146 billion) AI core industry by 2030. The plan is expected to stimulate related business to the tune of 10 trillion yuan.

During the process, AI will be commercial­ized in different industries including next-generation network security, robotics, blockchain, the internet of things, 3D printing and virtual reality.

Local blockchain firm Lianren, for instance, has leveraged advanced technologi­es such as AI and blockchain to enable users to conduct e-commerce through livestream­ing and short videos.

The company said it has raised $30 million in its latest round of financing and will leverage blockchain technology to speed up the digitaliza­tion of the local government administra­tion process in Fujian.

“National-level policies, extensive applicatio­n data, rich applicatio­n scenarios and the accumulati­on of young talents are four unique advantages of China’s AI industry,” said Gao Wen, an academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Engineerin­g.

The high-tech push is also expected to be accelerate­d since the country is launching superfast 5G technology in the communicat­ions industry.

“5G will enable data transfers at speeds much faster than 4G, meaning that it could quickly gather data. It will improve the efficiency of AI,” said Yang Kun, an expert at the China Academy of Informatio­n and Communicat­ions Technology, a research institute based in Beijing.

However, Xue Lan, dean of Schwarzman College at Tsinghua University and chairman of the committee, pointed out that AI has raised a string of new challenges.

“Increasing bottleneck­s including data privacy, machine ethics, safety, risks and misuse of spreading misinforma­tion remain to be tackled,” Xue said.

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