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Nicholas Gordon

How will China respond to ChatGPT?

(Credit: NICOLAS ASFOURI/AFP via Getty Images))

Hello from Hong Kong! Nicholas Gordon here, filling in for Jeremy this week.

I admit to feeling some mild jealousy when I see people talking about everyone’s favorite new A.I. toy, ChatGPT. Unfortunately, I’ve not been able to test the new program for myself. OpenAI has not made the service available in either mainland China or Hong Kong—though Chinese internet users have already found ways around that barrier.

Still, ChatGPT has made the same splash in conversations on this side of the Pacific Ocean, with speakers and conference attendees wondering how this new technology might revamp the country’s tech sector.

It’s clear that Chinese researchers and companies are taking A.I. seriously. A study from Nikkei Asia, conducted in partnership with Dutch publisher Elsevier, reports that China produced twice as many A.I.-focused papers than the U.S. in 2021. Chinese papers were also in the top 10% of citations by other papers, with a tally 70% greater than those from the U.S. And three Chinese tech giants—Tencent, Alibaba, and Huawei—are among the top ten companies driving A.I. research. 

The study only covers 2021, however. And ChatGPT’s fame—at least here in Hong Kong—shows that U.S. developers can still drive the tech conversation, despite all the talk of decoupling.

Chinese companies are developing their own generative A.I. programs, of course. And users report that some Chinese products handle some things better than their U.S. competitors. ERNIE-ViLG, an A.I. image generator developed by Baidu, is reportedly better at producing images that use Chinese cultural imagery or anime stylings than U.S. counterparts like OpenAI's DALL-E.

Yet these same Chinese A.I. programs fall into some of the same pitfalls, specifically around bias, as U.S.-developed programs. Chinese social media users had a field day with one Tencent-designed filter—which converted photos into an anime-styled image—after discovering that it was terrible, if not outright racist, when handling plus-size individuals and people of color.

And there are issues unique to Chinese programs: The MIT Technology Review notes that Baidu’s ERNIE-ViLG won’t let users generate images of Tiananmen Square.

China is taking the lead on some A.I.-focused regulations. Beijing last week imposed some of the world’s first restrictions on “deepfakes,” or the use of A.I. and machine learning technology to impersonate people’s image and voice.

“China is learning with the world as to the potential impacts of these things, but it’s moving forward with mandatory rules and enforcement more quickly,” Graham Webster, who leads Stanford University’s DigiChina project, told the Wall Street Journal last week. “People around the world should observe what happens.”

Beijing has embraced A.I. development, with policymakers making it one of the country’s 2023 economic priorities at the Central Economic Work Conference last December. And artificial intelligence is a key part of the country’s military strategy, like unmanned vehicles, information processing, and military decision-making.

China’s focus on A.I.—even if it’s still theoretical rather than fully realized—is partly why the Biden administration passed its widespread rules on chip exports last October. The U.S. leaned on companies like Nvidia to stop selling its most advanced graphics processors (which are useful for machine learning) to China. And in December, the U.S. barred companies from selling any chips made using U.S. chipmaking equipment to over 20 Chinese A.I. companies. 

Beijing appears to have been put on the back foot after Biden’s chip controls. It has yet to retaliate, instead trying to help Chinese chip companies comply with U.S. regulations where it can. Beijing is also reportedly pausing its investments and subsidies to build a giant chip industry, after failing to produce a local champion that can compete with U.S.-developed products. 

Regardless, the fight between Washington and Beijing is shaping up to be, in the words of Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, an “A.I. arms race.” That competition is also why Ives called Microsoft’s potential $10 billion investment in OpenAI a “smart poker play.”

In the meantime, I’ll continue waiting to see if I ever get to use ChatGPT—or if I’ll have to turn to a Chinese-developed competitor. 

Nicholas Gordon
@nickrigordon
nicholas.gordon@fortune.com

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