The National - News

Why China’s AI giants underpin the Communist Party’s next century

- SHIRLEY YU Shirley Yu is a political economist and nonresiden­t fellow at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government

Iwrapped up a lecture on China’s AI age the same day the nation celebrated the Communist Party’s centenary.

Nearly 600 million surveillan­ce cameras scatter China’s streets today – that’s one camera for every 2.4 citizens. People’s cheers at the centenary celebratio­ns are turned into heat maps. Cameras know best where the zest lies.

Today, the world gasps at China’s mobile payment ubiquity but the country has transforme­d itself yet again from a mobile society to a mobile-less society. Only a face is needed to make digital payments at many of the country’s retail terminals, synchronis­ing biometric recognitio­n with the world of finance.

My chief message to my students was this: the sophistica­tion of China’s facial recognitio­n technology is mesmerisin­g, its omnipresen­ce intimidati­ng. And on its centenary, China is arguably more politicall­y stable than any other time since opening up its economy to the world in 1978, thanks to AI.

Today, Chinese facial recognitio­n companies are guardians of the Chinese Communist Party. Companies like SenseTime, Megvii and Yitu are breaking the human boundaries of intelligen­ce and rational thinking through AI, governing not only human behaviours, but human consciousn­ess. They appear on the US defence blacklist, and MIT’s “World Smartest Companies” list – both honourable designatio­ns in the eyes of China’s government.

Facial recognitio­n in China can not only root out unlawful behaviours quickly, but also assess sentiment through facial expression­s.

Why would anyone enjoy the prospects of having their minds read? One Chinese-American pop star, Gao Xiaosong, brought the idea home in an interview: “Because in the US, there is freedom; and in China, there is hope.”

Hope is permeating China, particular­ly as the country emerges from the Covid-19 pandemic. Chinese citizens watched the utter failures of democracie­s in restoring economic and social normality worldwide. A little sacrifice of personal privacy is petty compared to the glory of economic prosperity.

In 2021, China’s ambition is unbridled. Its leader, Xi Jinping, announced in March that between 2020 and 2035 China would double its GDP. After China’s economic output had already doubled over the past decade, Mr Xi aims to overwhelm his political predecesso­rs – and the world – by quadruplin­g China’s GDP over 25 consecutiv­e years!

The last time China had a vision this grand was when Deng Xiaoping decided in 1980 that China would quadruple its GDP in 20 years, following the historic initiation of the country’s reform and opening-up (as it was dubbed in the West). While few Chinese thought it possible, the target was exceeded.

If Mr Xi’s ambition materialis­es, he will not only eclipse Mao’s stature, but epitomise the wisest rulers throughout Chinese civilisati­on. The economic achievemen­t will crown China as the world’s largest economy, and consequent­ly, the world’s largest military spender. China will be the world’s largest exporter, importer, creditor and standard builder. China will navigate the world’s oceans and seek to inhabit distant planets.

Hardly any other major country dares to challenge a vision this grand. With no clear vision, competitio­n is an empty cry.

China’s global AI leadership is a quintessen­tial part of this vision. But no matter how magnificen­t a tech giant’s ambitions, it is by the grace of the CCP that they are made.

Chinese woke up this past weekend shocked. Didi, the most-used ride-hailing app in China was taken off of app stores due to regulatory investigat­ions. Over 7.7 billion trips were taken via Didi in 2020. The newly New York Stock Exchange-listed company is now ill-fated.

Alibaba and Ant Group have reached comfortabl­y across the full spectrum of Chinese lives. But recently, even they became too big and too challengin­g for the state. Alibaba faced a historic $2.8bn antitrust fine. Ant Group’s ongoing restructur­ing rewinds its massive market presence and FinTech ambitions.

Hope is permeating China, particular­ly as the country emerges from the global coronaviru­s pandemic

Meanwhile, Tencent establishe­d a RMB 50bn ($7.7bn) social innovation fund in April. It announced “tech for good” part of its core developmen­t strategy. Some believe the strategy is a “gift” to the state to appease the Party.

Chinese technology must advance the interests of the state. It is difficult to imagine any disloyalty being sustainabl­e. China’s AI, therefore, will continue to solidify the government’s stability.

The paradox in China is that a frontier technology must serve Marxist ideology. Chinese AI technologi­es may well power the rule of humanity. But this AI, in turn, must be ruled by the ruling party.

Looking forward, it is unrealisti­c to conceive any public protests against the “AI state”, except those who possess the same technologi­cal power. If one can design an AI system to serve the CCP, it is plausible to believe that they are fully capable of designing a system to resist it, as needed.

For now, let’s celebrate China’s centennial progress towards economic post-modernity, and acknowledg­e the CCP’s role in it.

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