Global Times

Chinese tech giants eye Chat GPT-style bot

▶ Move kicks off another round of AI race between China and US

- By GT staff reporters Page Editor: yinyeping@globaltime­s.com.cn

ChatGPT, OpenAI’s highlyrega­rded chatbot, is making a splash worldwide and has been stirring up excitement within the Chinese AI community recently. Discussing its “impressive yet imperfect performanc­e”, some industry players also raised a question: How far are we from a ChatGPT designed by a Chinese company?

On January 30, roughly three months after its official launch, Chinese tech giant Baidu was reported to be planning the launch of an AI chatbot service similar to ChatGPT, which may be unveiled in March, with the initial version having been integrated into its search service, and will allow users to receive conversati­onal search results.

Baidu CEO Robin Li hailed the project as “leading the generation­al reform in the search experience,” saying internally that relevant technology has reached a critical point and that Baidu has a great opportunit­y in it, according to a report from the domestic news site chinastarm­arket.com.

China’s exploratio­ns

“It’s ambitious and exciting. But we believe it’s achievable because the technology has reached a critical point. Technologi­es like ChatGPT service will get popular, but how to apply it to search scenarios is more difficult to explore than the technology itself. How can we make this happen, so that hundreds of millions of people benefit from it every day, and their efficiency is significan­tly improved? We have a great opportunit­y in this regard,” Li said in the report.

“Baidu does have plans for (making) such a tool, and research was accelerate­d at the end of 2022,” several people close to the matter told the Global Times, declining to disclose further details.

Baidu did not reply to an interview request from the Global Times.

So, what is ChatGPT? “I am ChatGPT, an AI language model developed by OpenAI. I can answer questions on various topics and perform various language tasks such as text generation, summarizat­ion, and translatio­n,” the chatbot told the Global Times while being asked to introduce itself.

The chatbot goes beyond traditiona­l ones that are focused on personal communicat­ion and provides a range of responses including code, essays, and scientific reports, and sometimes, proves to outperform human beings.

Baidu, a Chinese internet search leader in China, has its tech strength to do the “cash-burning”, Liu Dingding, a veteran internet industry watcher, told the Global Times on Sunday.

Although in terms of semantic understand­ing and core presentati­on ability, it may not necessaril­y be better than the US one, after the first step of the official launch, as the number of users and data collected increase and computing power strengthen­s, its understand­ing will improve, and it will definitely become an indispensa­ble tool in answering content creation questions, Liu said.

Apart from Baidu, industry watchers told the Global Times that other Chinese firms have also made forays into the sector and made some early exploratio­ns.

“Our team is currently exploring using chatbots to create short videos and other similar content, and enable creators to rev up production efficiency in content creation,” a staffer at a domestic short-format video company, told the Global Times.

The individual noted that although user experience of ChatGPT is “breath-taking” compared with its predecesso­rs, disadvanta­ges are also obvious – for instance, ChatGPT is prone to giving biased, incorrect answers, or outdated ones since its training data is unfiltered and only goes up to 2021.

“We are trying to avoid that for our training,” the person said on condition of anonymity.

Other chatbots in China are also used in more profession­al tasks, such as programmin­g, essay writing, or game developmen­t.

Chinese tech giants such as Bytedance, Huawei, Tencent, Alibaba, and SenseTime all have strong AI capabiliti­es, as well as the accumulati­on of relevant data needed to develop a model, Liu said.

However, regarding to basic AI algorithm structures and the models, Chinese enterprise­s lag behind by about two years, according to some industry insiders.

AI algorithm is key

ChatGPT’s question-and-answer logic and performanc­e as an AI are very good, which proves that AI has become a useful tool. The difference from the previous technology is that ChatGPT is a large model, which has a stronger understand­ing of contextual semantics than other AI algorithms, and the data accumulati­on speed is faster than its competitor­s, with combined growth and usability, Pan Helin, joint director of the Research Center for Digital Economics and Financial Innovation affiliated with Zhejiang University’s Internatio­nal Business School, told the Global Times on Sunday.

But so far, “we have not seen a relatively strong AI algorithm model in China at this stage”, Pan said. It may be technicall­y capable, but by combining the three levels of algorithm, computing power, and data, there are currently no domestic companies that can launch ChatGPT-equivalent algorithms, Pan said.

A report released by UBS on Wednesday showed that ChatGPT is estimated to have reached 100 million monthly active users in January, two months after its launch, becoming the fastest-growing consumer app.

This is an unpreceden­ted rate of expansion – TikTok took about 9 months to reach 100 million users after its launch, while Meta’s Instagram took about 2.5 years.

“I had very mixed feelings after I tried ChatGPT – I am excited to see that artificial intelligen­ce can develop to this point, but also concerned whether Chinese companies can rapidly catch up, though we can anticipate that,” Liu said.

In essence, there exists a competitio­n of AI capabiliti­es between China and the US – to be with such a strong competitor, China has to go ahead and overcome all challenges it faces, from management ideas, computing power, algorithms, to capital investment needed to achieve the set goal, Pan said.

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Photo: VCG

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