What's new

China's Race for Artificial Intelligence (AI) Technology

Hands on: iFlyTek revamps its AI translator with touchscreen and more languages

By Gong Zhe
2018-05-01


Chinese speech recognition giant iFlyTek released its second-generation handheld translator gadget last Friday, with the latest iteration including a touchscreen and the addition of 33 languages.

CGTN has covered the Hefei-based company's first-generation device many times, which sometimes confused users, as it had no screen, but simply a speaker and a light indicator to show it was working.

In the latest device, the company has fixed that shortcoming, and added a touchscreen to make the user experience easier.

"Now you can have a better interaction with the device. No need to worry about if it's still functioning," said the product manager Zhai Jibo.

Another upgrade is language options. It now supports 33 languages that can "cover more than 95 percent of your travel destinations," iFlyTek co-founder Hu Yu said during the press conference.

The new device can now recognize heavy Chinese accents and even Cantonese, which has an entirely different vocabulary than Mandarin Chinese.

We at CGTN are tired of tech companies bragging, so we designed a series of tests to see if the device stood up to the hype. The tests were designed based on previous errors made by other AIs from other Chinese companies.

So how does the device deal with stuttering, understanding a heavy Chinese accent, or decoding complex sentences? Watch it in the cover video (spoiler: it's a pass).

People from the company gave us some insight on how the device works, with a significant change being that the device has a phone SIM card slot, which means it can contact a cloud AI with 4G connection.

The AI, has been in development by iFlyTek for more than a decade and is one of the first neural networks designed for voice recognition. It can cancel out noise as well as guess at the context of sentences, making it stand out from its competitors.

If you are concerned with privacy, offline translation is also available.

iFlyTek said they designed the second-generation device with traveling in mind. Users can purchase data packages when they are outside of China, and share the data quota with smartphones and laptops nearby.

"We are yet to know the size of the market. But this device is a blunt demonstration of the power of our technology in voice recognition and real-time translation," Zhai told reporters.

In addition to the translator, iFlyTek has also empowered their AI transcript software with translating capabilities.

The program was used to transcribe and translate all speeches made during the press release. But a CGTN reporter found that the English translation sometimes appears so quick that people can barely see the text.

The device is already available for purchase on the Chinese mainland. So if a Chinese person points a phone-like gadget at you. Don't be scared. They may just want to chat.

Watch the video of this amazing gadget.

baidu, alibaba and tencent getting a lot of hype in ai speech from media... the real leader in this technology in china is iflytek :D
 
Last edited:
.
baidu, alibaba and tencent getting a lot of hype in ai speech from media... the real leader in this technology in china is iflytek :D

A lot of student that I know would like to get a hold on one of these machines (especially those struggling with English), but, way too expensive for most of them (including me) :lol:

Can't they make a cheaper version but works more or less as good?
 
.
This Week In China Tech: Alibaba Buys Chip Maker, Face Scans To Board Planes, And More

MAY 2, 2018

Bay McLaughlin

Facial recognition and digitization of your identity are the major themes for This Week In China Tech. We stay on top of the most important tech stories coming out of the mainland every week and make sure you understand why they matter. Here's all the news you need to know coming out of China's thriving tech scene.

Alibaba Acquires Chip Maker And Announces New AI Chip

This is a big day for China. Historically, the chip design industry has been dominated by the West, but not anymore. Alibaba made two big announcements this week (article in Chinese): 1) their first AI chip dubbed Ali-NPU (neural processing unit) from their AI research center, DAMO Academy and 2) the acquisition of ZhongTian Micro, China’s only independent chip design firm.

Alibaba’s CTO, Zhang Jianfeng said, “The acquisition of ZhongTian Micro is an important part of Alibaba's chip layout." He also said that entering the core IP area of chip design is critical for China’s "autonomy and control.” China and the rest of the world have been dependent on U.S.-based firms for their chip designs, but as we enter the era of AI, it’s a smart decision for China to own their own IP in the area.

The Ali-NPU seems destined to power AliCloud, Alibaba’s answer to Amazon Web Services. But other applications may also be on the horizon like Apple, Qualcomm, and Huawei’s AI chips that are used in mobile phones. Either way, it’s clear that Alibaba has seen this as a strategic necessity as they have previously invested in a variety of chipmakers over the years like Cambricon, Kneron, ASR, DeePhi and Barefoot Networks. However, an outright acquisition and their first AI chip announcement shed light on just how important Alibaba thinks the battle for AI dominance will be in the future.

At Baiyun Airport, You Can Board Using Only Your Face

Traveling is still a hassle, but China is taking the next step in ultimate convenience: using your face to let you check in and board planes. In the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou's Baiyun Airport (only Terminal 2 at the moment), you can self-check in your bag, get through security and board your airplane using just your face. This security system is very sophisticated and solves one of the major inconveniences of travel, but users are still required to bring their ID card as a backup (read the next story for more about how this may also go away soon).

The Baiyun Airport Operational Control Hall (article in Chinese) is powered by AI applications from visual analysis technology leader Haiyun Data. This big data solution is dubbed "Rising Star" and assesses three key aviation areas: the flight areas, terminal areas and the connecting areas like underground baggage storage. The data collected from these three airport areas is combined with external data sets like traffic, meteorology and maps, and analyzed by their AI. The AI-powered results help to optimize five major data streams: aircraft, passenger, baggage, cargo and traffic flow. The current system can handle 60,000 messages per minute and allows the airport controllers to visualize their entire airport in real-time and diagnose issues as they happen.

WeChat ID Card Allows Seamless Travel Across China

A pilot of a new digital e-ID card is rolling out across China. For anyone that uses Apple, you can think of this e-ID card like your Apple Wallet. Users will be able to digitize their information at a police station (their physical ID card, face and fingerprint data) and store their confirmed e-ID in their WeChat Wallet (article in Chinese) via a mini-program. Mini-programs in WeChat are like the mini-app integrations you see in Facebook Messenger and Apple's iMessage, for outside programs like Google Maps, Paypal and Yelp!.

The benefits of such a system are profound. Today, when a user checks into a hotel, it’s widely known that their personal data can be misused. Also, the check-in process can often be painful. With your WeChat e-ID, you can simply walk into a hotel, scan your face and then receive the keys to your room. Your face scan is automatically cross-referenced against the local police database and confirmed or denied. Your personal information is never given to the hotel.

The current pilots are focused on travel across Guangzhou, Foshan, Wenzhou, Beijing and a few other cities. The solution seems to be going well and will likely be rolled out quickly, and other verticals like banking are being trialed soon.

That's it for this week in China Tech. If you have any stories you think we should cover next week, feel free to message me and make sure to check back for more stories coming from China next week.

Bay is the Co-Founder of Brinc.io, an early-stage IoT and Hardware investment and product development firm and an active speaker around the world. You can learn more and connect with bay at BetaBay.me

https://www.forbes.com/sites/baymcl...-scans-to-board-planes-and-more/#7cd31f223722
 
. .
Tech giants bet big on AI with startup investments
China Daily, May 4, 2018

China's technology giants are placing a slew of fresh bets on artificial intelligence by investing in startup firms that are set to disrupt the burgeoning sector.

cde299ec-3218-48a8-b1ad-afc3df48eff4.jpeg

An intelligent robot, made by Shenzhen-headquartered UBTECH, attracts visitors at an industry expo in Qingdao, Shandong province.[Photo by Wang Haibin/for China Daily]
Alibaba Group Holding Ltd announced on Thursday it will fully acquire Beijing Sound Connect Technology Co, a speech solution provider for smart devices, as it ramps up efforts to enhance sound recognition and human-machine interactive technologies.

Founder of Sound Connect Fu Qiang, who is a former acoustics expert at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, will join Alibaba's Damo Academy, an in-house research and development program, to broaden the application scenarios of voice interaction, including smart home furniture.

In his new post, Fu and his team will help beef up the e-commerce giant's audio signal processing technologies, the internet of things technologies and hardware and software solutions. He is also expected to establish two physical acoustic labs.

According to Fu, Chinese companies are not lagging behind their foreign rivals in the accumulation of voice processing-related technologies, but they lack successful products.

"Given the rather lengthy chain of voice interaction technology, some ideas are just difficult to put into practice without excellent product designs," Fu said. "A bigger platform like Alibaba would help our technologies generate more value."

On the same day, Tencent Holdings Ltd led a $820 million Series C funding in Shenzhen-headquartered UBTECH Robotics, a leading intelligent humanoid robot maker, marking the single largest financing round for an AI company.

Under the agreement, Tencent will work closely with UBTECH on future product development, based on an existing partnership that already integrates a suite of Tencent technologies from its cloud-computing Xiaowei service and the AI-powered Dingdang assistant.

"The latest capital infusion represents a new round of strategic funding, with UBTECH and Tencent committed to building an ecosystem of services and content for intelligent, humanoid robots," said Zhou Jian, UBTECH founder and chief executive officer.

The country's tech titans Alibaba, Tencent and search engine Baidu Inc have collectively participated in 39 equity deals into startups building AI software and AI chips since 2014, according to a report by venture capital database CB Insights in April.

China has upheld the development of AI as a national strategy and has recruited Tencent, Alibaba, iFlytek and Baidu Inc to an "AI national team" to have them each focus on one specific field.

@qwerrty :D
 
.
China releases its first cloud AI chip

2018-05-04 09:02 Xinhua Editor: Wang Fan

U363P886T1D301304F12DT20180503230224.jpg

Cambricon Technology CEO Chen Tianshi introduces the cloud AI chip MLU100 in Shanghai, east China, May 3, 2018. China's first cloud artificial intelligence (AI) chip was released by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) on Thursday in Shanghai. The cloud chip MLU100, developed by Cambricon Technology, will have accurate and fast big data processing ability, especially in image and voice search methods. (Xinhua/Jin Liwang)

China's first cloud artificial intelligence (AI) chip was released by the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) on Thursday in Shanghai.

The cloud chip MLU100, developed by Cambricon Technology, will have accurate and fast big data processing ability, especially in image and voice search methods.

The cloud chips are mainly used in cloud computing, including servers and data centers. The MLU100 is powerful and can complete complicated cloud intelligence tasks, according to the CAS.

The cloud chip supports "deep learning," or neural networks that mimic human learning. Deep learning is a type of machine learning involving algorithms that can analyze data, recognize patterns and make predictions.

http://www.ecns.cn/2018/05-03/301304.shtml
 
.
A lot of student that I know would like to get a hold on one of these machines (especially those struggling with English), but, way too expensive for most of them (including me) :lol:

Can't they make a cheaper version but works more or less as good?
The price will certainly come down in the future and likely face competitors. iFlytek has a first mover's advantage. First to market earns a premium which will cover its R&D and enable it to develop better products down the line.
 
.
AI to help China reach for the stars

2018-05-04 08:30 Xinhua Editor: Wang Fan

Building a space station, probing Mars, setting up a lunar base and going deeper into the universe - artificial intelligence will be at the cutting edge of China's space odyssey.

China is stepping up development of artificial intelligence (AI) technology to support its space programs, Zhang Duzhou, a member of the Chinese Association of Automation and the Chinese Society of Astronautics, told a space conference in Harbin, capital of northeast China's Heilongjiang Province.

Back in 1995, Yang Jiachi, a leading contributor to the development of China's first satellite about half a century ago, proposed developing technology for the intelligent autonomous control of spacecraft.

Experts are now developing AI technologies in visual image recognition, visual tracking, rendezvous and docking, navigation and positioning, mission planning and spacecraft fault diagnosis, said Zhang.

Some Chinese spacecraft have been endowed with the preliminary ability of autonomous task-planning.

For instance, Tianzhou-1, China's first cargo spacecraft launched in April 2017, accomplished autonomous fast rendezvous and docking with the Tiangong-2 space lab. The rendezvous and docking time was shortened from three days to six and a half hours thanks to AI.

AI technology also aided the Chang'e-3 lunar probe, launched in 2013, to touch down softly on the Moon. The probe's lander was capable of hovering and choosing a suitable landing site on its own.

However, Zhang said, China's space AI is still "weak". If AI technologies are divided into six levels, China is at level two or level three. The technology at level six, the highest level, can enable spacecraft to perform automatic reasoning and independent thinking in orbit.

"Our aim is to reach level six," Zhang said.

AI technology is especially useful for spacecraft that are expensive, hard to repair, doing complicated tasks, deployed in a rigorous space environment, or so far from Earth that they respond to directions very slowly, said Zhang.

With AI, spacecraft could acquire the abilities of self-learning, autonomous perception and planning and self-decision, thus lowering the cost of operation and increasing the quality, safety, reliability and flexibility of space missions.

The development of AI will bring breakthroughs to China's space industry, he added.

http://www.ecns.cn/2018/05-03/301301.shtml
 
.
The price will certainly come down in the future and likely face competitors. iFlytek has a first mover's advantage. First to market earns a premium which will cover its R&D and enable it to develop better products down the line.

Have to wait a little bit longer than. I think that's fine for me as I do not have much issues with English :enjoy:
 
.
Global AI Product Application Expo 2018 opens in Jiangsu, E China
Source: Xinhua| 2018-05-10 21:43:30|Editor: ZX


Visitors tour at the Global AI Product Application Expo 2018, in Suzhou of east China's Jiangsu Province, May 10, 2018. The three-day expo opened here on Thursday, attracting more than 200 exhibitors from ten countries and regions, with some 1,000 AI products on show. (Xinhua/Li Xiang)

137170192_15259596872321n.jpg

137170192_15259596872661n.jpg

137170192_15259596872951n.jpg

137170192_15259596873261n.jpg
 
.
China's AI patents account for 22 pct of world's total: official

2018-05-11 10:32 Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

China's patents in the artificial intelligence (AI) industry accounted for about 22 percent of the total globally, according to an official with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT).

Wang Xinzhe said China had more than 2,000 artificial intelligence companies by the end of 2017. Wang made the comments at the Global AI Products Application EXPO 2018 in Suzhou city, Jiangsu Province.

About 150 AI companies and institutions from 10 countries and regions participated in the three-day exposition, which kicked off on Thursday, showcasing more than 1,000 AI products.

Wang said China's AI companies are mainly located in the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region, the Yangtze River Delta and the Pearl River Delta. Beijing and Shanghai, as well as Guangdong, Jiangsu and Zhejiang provinces have more than 100 AI companies each.

By 2020, China's AI industry is expected to reach 150 billion yuan (23.6 billion U.S. dollars), said Wang.
 
.
China's first AI medical lab opens in Guangzhou hospital
By Gao Yun
2018-05-11 16:03 GMT+8

3b592e71202d4f49a6d7e98c380c2f1d.jpg

A joint lab utilizing artificial intelligence (AI) in the diagnosis of disease was established on Thursday in Guangzhou, South China’s Guangdong Province, according to local media.

The lab, the first of its kind in China, was established by the Guangzhou Women and Children's Medical Center, the largest hospital of its kind in South China, Tencent and Guangdong Bestway Technology Co. The companies will help to build the center into an e-hospital based on AI technologies.

The lab's first project – a medical consultation system – was also launched on the same day, aiding patients in identifying diseases and finding the right department and doctor in as little as five seconds.

686d59a647d34c0d8749323524dfe98c.jpg
The intelligent medical consultation system /Tencent Photo

By sending a text or voice message to the intelligent system, patients can describe their symptoms, have their illness identified and find the department they should visit. They can also find a doctor by typing the doctor’s name.

The system can also distinguish first-visit patients and return-visit ones, and assign the latter to the same doctor, a step that improves the treatment's efficiency and experience.

Wide coverage, high accuracy

During the trial period over the last three months, the system received over 2,000 hits per day, it recorded a 94 percent accuracy rate in diagnosis and 96 percent accuracy rate in doctor recommendations. It can identify 518 types of disease, covering over 95 percent of common diseases in women and children.

“The intelligent consultation system is just a beginning,” said Ding Ke, vice president of Tencent. Via cooperation with medical institutions and experts, the application will be extended to more services in the future, including accurate reservation, return-visit consultation and follow-up information collection, Ding added.
 
.
Robot monk updated by Chinese tech firms

2018-05-14 09:43 Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping

U472P886T1D302421F12DT20180514094344.jpg

A robot named "Xian'Er" makes its debut at Guangzhou Animation Festival in Guangzhou, capital of south China's Guangdong Province, Oct. 4, 2015. (Photo: Xinhua/Xue Dongmei)

The Buddhist robots have arrived, and two of China's leading tech firms iFlytek and Tencent have signed a deal with a temple to try to advance a robot monk's wisdom.

U472P886T1D302421F137DT20180514094344.jpg


Master Xiandu, from Longquan Temple in Beijing, stands alongside Xian'er, a 60-cm tall robot monk in yellow robes sporting a shaved head, at the 5th China Robotop, an annual summit held in Yuyao City, east China's Zhejiang Province, on Thursday.

"The temple has sought to introduce up-to-date AI technology to upgrade Xian'er," said the master, who is in charge of AI and Information Technology at the Buddhist temple.

The temple located on Fenghuang Hill in Beijing's northwest outskirts, 50 km away from the downtown, is regarded as China's most tech-strong temple, with a number of its monks graduating from China's most prestigious universities.

The temple's technology team in 2015 independently developed the robot monk, which can chant mantras and answer questions on basic Buddhist tenets.

Xiandu said that by signing with iFlytek and Tecent, the temple hoped to develop the third generation of Xian'er.

Xian'er's appearance is based on the temple's former cartoon image of a small, puzzled-looking novice monk. It has over 1.37 million fans, and has daily exchanges in both Chinese and English in text and voice messages with some 100,000 people each day on its account on WeChat, a popular messaging app.

The temple's robot development team has found that most questions proposed to Xian'er are about love, stress, annoyance and confusion in life.

Xiandu said Xian'er's answers were mainly based on the thoughts of the temple's abbot, Master Xuecheng. The temple plans to build a database based on the robot's questions and answers.

According to the plan, iFlytek will help improve Xian'er's artificial language ability, and Tencent will boost the robot's data processing functions.

Xiandu said Buddhist doctrine contained Chinese traditional culture and thinking, which could still inspire people. Xian'er can share such wisdom to those who confide it.

He said modern technology has also been introduced to the temple's work on digitizing ancient Buddhist books.
 
.
Domestic firms still lag behind Western rivals, but boast advantages in AI technologies: industry experts

By Shen Weiduo Source:Global Times Published: 2018/5/9

5a062ce3-8b39-483b-9965-7c5e380ef087.jpeg

Photo:IC


China in recent years has been ramping up efforts to develop core technologies in the domestic chip industry, in an aim to cut its strong reliance on other countries and regions, and that pace was further accelerated in April following the US' ban on component sales to Chinese telecom company ZTE Corp.

The most recent move taken by the Chinese government to bulk up the country's chip-making muscles includes the establishment of a new fund worth more than $47 billion, run by the National Integrated Circuitry Industry Investment Fund Co, the Wall Street Journal reported on Monday.

Meanwhile, Chinese technology giant Alibaba Group Holding said in an announcement it sent to the Global Times that in April it acquired Hangzhou-based C-Sky Microsystems, a manufacturer of embedded chips, an important move in its chip development efforts.

In 2017, the conglomerate also said it would strengthen its technology research input, in an aim to invest more than $15 billion in R&D in the following three years.

Alibaba also set up a global research program in 2017 named DAMO Academy to seek global technological cooperation.

On May 3, Chinese tech companies Lenovo Group, Dawning Information Industry Co (also known as Sugon) and iFlytek also displayed new AI products at a product launch conference held by AI chip start-up Cambricon Technologies Corp.

During the conference, Lenovo released its first server platform equipped with Chinese-designed Cambricon chip-powered MLU100 intelligent processing cards.

Those efforts seem to have paid off. Data released by China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) showed that in the first quarter of 2018, the value of China's electronic information manufacturing industry grew by 12.5 percent compared with the same period in 2017, faster than the growth rate of all above-scale industries by 6.7 percentage points.

The volume of integrated circuits produced in the first quarter of 2018 reached 39.99 billion, up 15.2 percent compared with 2016's figure, said the MIIT.

A shortcut?

Despite the rapid growth, it is widely believed that due to the time-consuming, slow and costly nature of chip development, China now lags behind the West in most chip-making processes and is unlikely to catch up in the short term.

Japanese financial news outlet the Nikkei Asian Review on May 1 reported that British chipmaker Arm Holdings will cede control of its Chinese operations in a new joint venture (JV) named Arm Mini China, with China set to hold a majority stake of 51 percent.

On Tuesday, Arm confirmed the news to the Global Times via email, stating the new JV has already begun operation, and that it will provide extensive technology support for its Chinese partners throughout the new venture.

Arm will also help localize technology to satisfy the demand in the Chinese market.

"Arm dominates in designing one of the key chip technologies, which others are unlikely to catch up with," a graduate research assistant at Duke University's Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, who only gave his surname as Yang, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Major tech multinationals including Apple Inc, Samsung Electronics, Huawei Technologies, Qualcomm, Broadcom and MediaTek all need to license technology from Arm, one of the most influential chip technology providers in the world, to develop chipsets for their smartphones, tablets, wearables and various other connected devices.

"It's possible that domestic chip designers may benefit from the technology transfer, however, the chip-making process is too complicated; designing is just one part of the whole process," Yang said.

Geng Bo, vice secretary-general of the China Solid State Lighting Alliance, agreed with Yang, admitting that it is of course good news for the Chinese chip industry, but that it's too soon to say if the industry will definitely improve just because of the advancement of one specific technology.

Yang said that even with support from foreign firms, knowing how to actually use the technologies independently is vital.

"Having fresh meat is good, but you also need to know how to cook it," he said, adding that after the design phase, the chip-making process is where China lags behind its western rivals.

Experts have also cautioned that if China wants to develop its own technologies in the chip industry, especially those related to national security, it must look at the "chip crisis" from the roots.

AI opportunities

Some domestic industry players, however, say that China has strengths in AI chip development, with many Chinese companies already leading the way in global cutting-edge AI technologies.

"AI is where we may overtake our foreign rivals. Our company is increasing efforts in developing AI chips and has seen some fruit sprout already. For example, our chips have been used in the new retail industry and facial recognition. They have already been applied in self-service stores and airports," Chen Feng, vice president of Chinese fabless semiconductor maker Rockchip, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Chen's company ranked 20th among the top AI companies in the world in a recent list released by global industry consultancy Compass Intelligence. Meanwhile, Chinese tech giant Huawei ranked 12th.

According to the ranking, US-based Nvidia is still the leading global player, followed by Intel and IBM.

A Chinese AI scientist who works at a US internet company spoke on condition of anonymity to the Global Times on Tuesday, saying that unlike in traditional chip industries, Chinese firms didn't miss the chance of developing AI chips at an early stage, so that is why they are now at a level playing field with their US counterparts.

He also noted that China's large user base ensures ample user feedback during testing processes, important for AI chip R&D.

However, he underscored that whether these AI chips can be defined as "successful" still lies in their sales performance and application scenarios in the future market.

Optimism with caution

"It's hard to predict how long it will take for China to catch up with others, or successfully develop its own core technologies, but for traditional chip sectors, the time will be longer," Geng said.

Nevertheless, Geng remains optimistic about the domestic semiconductor industry, considering China's successful experiences in the LED chip-making industry.

Domestic LED chip development, starting from scratch in 2003, has successfully caught up with its foreign competitors over the past 15 years, and at present, more than 85 percent of lighting products in China have adopted homegrown LED chips, Geng said.

Although the technology barriers in domestic LED chip development are relatively minor compared to other chip types, they can still teach us a lot, Geng noted.

@qwerrty
 
.
China already at forefront of AI development, says expert

Source:Xinhua Published: 2018/5/17

China has already been at the forefront of the development of artificial intelligence (AI) and will take the lead in the field over time, a senior expert said during the 2nd AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva.

In an interview on Wednesday, Zhao Houlin, secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), told Xinhua that China has definitely gained the capability of spearheading AI development in the world, as the it stood out with conspicuous advantages.

Though China's core technologies, such as high-end chip manufacturing, cannot go neck to neck with world's top-tier technologies, Zhao said, China still enjoys incomparable advantages, in terms of the progress it has made in AI research and development, its market size, AI application range and promotion efforts. He gave the examples of drones, robots and unmanned vehicles to illustrate his points.

Another advantage that many countries don't have, Zhao stressed, is that China's top policymakers are able to play a bigger part in developing AI, so as to better allocate resources and lay out overall planning.

Besides, he said that China's second mover advantages are obvious. Although the United States owns the world's largest internet companies, China has a batch of companies to compete with the United States, and thus provides alternative services to both its domestic and overseas customers. China can even do better in the localization of AI technologies, Zhao noted.

However, the head of the ITU pointed out that Chinese enterprises still need to improve its innovative abilities, as few of the latest concepts and ideas came from China.

He also mentioned that the world should not put too much emphasis on how AI would likely cause changes in current rules and regulations, as well as market restrictions.

He said there is much to be discussed about how AI could better fit into human society and how to set rules in AI application, as AI is still in its infancy.

The 2nd AI for Good Global Summit, kicked off Tuesday, is looking for concrete artificial intelligence (AI) projects that can accelerate progress towards the UN Sustainable Development Goals, Zhao said at the event's opening ceremony.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/1102750.shtml
 
.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom