Business Standard

China’s AI advances help its technology industry, and state security

- PAUL MOZUR & KEITH BRADSHER

During President Trump’s visit to Beijing, he appeared on screen for a special address at a tech conference.

First he spoke in English. Then he switched to Mandarin Chinese.

Trump doesn’t speak Chinese. The video was a publicity stunt, designed to show off the voice capabiliti­es of iFlyTek, a Chinese artificial intelligen­ce company with both innovative technology and troubling ties to Chinese state security. IFlyTek has said its technology can monitor a car full of people or a crowded room, identify a targeted individual’s voice and record everything that person says. “IFlyTek,” the image of Trump said in Chinese, “is really fantastic.”

As China tests the frontiers of artificial intelligen­ce, iFlyTek serves as a compelling example of both the country’s sci-fi ambitions and the technology’s darker dystopian possibilit­ies.

The Chinese company uses sophistica­ted AI to power image and voice recognitio­n systems that can help doctors with their diagnoses, aid teachers in grading tests and let drivers control their cars with their voices. Even some global companies are impressed: Delphi, a major American auto supplier, offers iFlyTek’s technology to carmakers in China, while Volkswagen plans to build the Chinese company’s speech recognitio­n technology into many of its cars in China next year.

At the same time, iFlyTek hosts a laboratory to develop voice surveillan­ce capabiliti­es for China’s domestic security forces. In an October report, a human rights group said the company was helping the authoritie­s compile a biometric voice database of Chinese citizens that could be used to track activists and others.

Those tight ties with the government could give iFlyTek and other Chinese companies an edge in an emerging new field. China’s financial support and its loosely enforced and untested privacy laws give Chinese companies considerab­le resources and access to voices, faces and other biometric data in vast quantities, which could help them develop their technologi­es, experts say.

China “does not have the stringent privacy laws that Western companies have, nor are Chinese citizens against having their data collected, as (arguably speaking) government monitoring is a fact of China,” analysts with the research firm Sanford C Bernstein wrote in a report in November.

Already, China’s companies have at times edged out foreign rivals. IFlyTek has won major competitio­ns for speech recognitio­n and translatio­n. Two years before Microsoft did, Baidu, the Chinese internet search company, created software capable of matching human skills at understand­ing speech. This year the Shanghai-based start-up Yitu took first place in a major facial recognitio­n contest run by the United States government.

IFlyTek and other Chinese companies say they follow China’s laws and protect user data. But they agree that the sheer number of users in China, plus the government’s single-minded drive to dominate the new technology, puts them at an advantage.

“China has entered the artificial intelligen­ce age together with the US,” said Liu Qingfeng, iFlyTek’s chairman, at the Beijing conference. “But due to the advantage of a huge amount of users and China’s social governance, AI will develop faster and spread from China to the world.” An iFlyTek spokeswoma­n said the company had yet to receive required permission from officials in Anhui, the Chinese province where it is based, to speak with the foreign news media.

IFlyTek is portrayed in the Chinese media both as a technology innovator and as an ally of the government. Last year iFlyTek helped prevent the loss of about $75 million in telecommun­ications fraud by helping the police target scammers, according to The Global Times, a nationalis­t tabloid controlled by the Communist Party. Its article quotes a Chinese security official as saying collecting voice patterns is like taking fingerprin­ts or recording people with closed-circuit television cameras, meaning the practice does not violate their privacy.

“We work with the Ministry of Public Security to pin down the criminals,” said Liu Junfeng, the general manager of the company’s automotive business, at a conference in September.

Where iFlyTek gets its data is not clear. But one of its owners is China Mobile, the state-controlled cellular network giant, which has more than 800 million subscriber­s. IFlyTek preloads its products on millions of China Mobile phones and runs the hotline service for China Mobile, which did not respond to a request for comment.

“Data is gold,” said Anil Jain, a professor who studies biometrics at Michigan State University. “These days you cannot design an accurate and robust recognitio­n system for anything” without data.

Cars could be another major market, iFlyTek believes. China is pioneering a push into self-driving cars, which could heavily depend on voice technology. In September, iFlyTek introduced a new product, a glowing ellipsoid that mounts on a dashboard and listens for questions that it can check online, like a carmounted Siri. “We have to understand if the car is our friend, if there is an emotional connection,” Liu said.

Through a third-party supplier, a few hundred thousand of the four million cars that the Volkswagen Group sells in China annually will be equipped next year with iFlyTek voice recognitio­n technology, said Christoph Ludewig, a spokesman for the German automaker.

 ??  ?? The Chinese company, iFlyTek, uses sophistica­ted AI to power image and voice recognitio­n systems that can help doctors with their diagnoses, aid teachers in grading tests and let drivers control their cars with their voices
The Chinese company, iFlyTek, uses sophistica­ted AI to power image and voice recognitio­n systems that can help doctors with their diagnoses, aid teachers in grading tests and let drivers control their cars with their voices

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