Skip to content
Trending
EverydayRead
  • HOME
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Lifestyle
EverydayRead
EverydayRead
  • HOME
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
  • Lifestyle
EverydayRead
  Finance  Chinese AI applications now have bigger aims — they’re looking beyond chatbots
Finance

Chinese AI applications now have bigger aims — they’re looking beyond chatbots

AdminAdmin—January 27, 20250

The World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai on July 6, 2023.

Aly Song | Reuters

BEIJING — A slew of releases last week demonstrate how Chinese companies such as DeepSeek and ByteDance have moved quickly with artificial intelligence models that compete with OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

Now, many companies in China are increasingly building on that foundation to develop products that look to go beyond a chatbot.

Baidu, best known for its search engine and Ernie chatbot, said Tuesday its generative AI-integrated Wenku platform for quickly creating powerpoints and other documents had reached 40 million paying users, with revenue up 60% from a year ago as of the end of last year. Updated features, such as using AI to generate a presentation based on a company’s financial filing, started being rolled out to users in the last week.

On the corporate side, Gartner data and analytics director analyst Ben Yan estimates more than 10% of businesses in China are using AI, up from 8% about six months ago. That would be a pickup in pace — the last 2 percentage point increase in adoption took more than a year, he said Wednesday.

“With our clients, we hear more and more success stories,” he said in Mandarin translated by CNBC. Yan noted that so-called AI agents will help speed up corporate implementation of the new tech.

Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang on U.S.-China AI race: We need to unleash U.S. energy to enable AI boom

AI models focus on specific functions such as search and generating summaries, whereas AI agents are more advanced — they can automate entire processes from searching to booking. One example is OpenAI’s new “Operator” function that claims to be able to make restaurant reservations on behalf of a ChatGPT user.

AI agents are also on the verge of coming to the Chinese market at scale.

Tencent plans to soon integrate AI agents with its messaging and social media app WeChat, CEO Pony Ma told staff in a Jan. 13 speech, according to a copy of the annual address seen by CNBC.

More stories

China’s first global gaming hit sells millions in a week. An early investor shares what’s next

September 2, 2024

Treasurys on the blockchain: How a new deal could reshape the ETF industry

September 29, 2024

Elon Musk endorses Trump’s transition co-chair Howard Lutnick for Treasury secretary

November 17, 2024

Walmart’s former U.S. CEO Bill Simon thinks retailer can easily absorb tariff costs, criticizes its ‘doom and gloom’ commentary

May 16, 2025

“We believe that China’s AI sector is advancing at a pace comparable to that of the United States,” Jo Huang, head of private equity at Raffles Family Office, said in an email. She said the firm is considering investing in a leading China AI deep tech fund in order to capture the local opportunity.

The development of Chinese AI applications creates features that are being integrated with domestic smartphones. Apple’s AI intelligence functions have yet to come to iPhone users in China.

“There is also a shift towards a growing user preference for local brands that can offer advanced AI features tailored to regional consumer preferences,” Wei Sun, principal artificial intelligence analyst at Counterpoint Research, said in an email Thursday.

She pointed out that Chinese smartphone companies such as Honor, Xiaomi and Vivo have been able to improve user experience of AI features, thanks to efforts to improve the efficiency of AI models that can run on the device without relying heavily on an internet-connected cloud service.

Compliance hurdles

The latest developments also reflect a difference in regulatory scrutiny with the U.S., and with the kind of technology being created.

Baidu’s ChatGPT-like Ernie bot didn’t get Beijing’s green light for a public rollout until August 2023, nearly one year after ChatGPT took the world by storm.

While AI models must get official certification for use in China, using them in applications is much easier, said Alex Lu, founder of Shanghai-based LSY consulting. On the side, he is working with a small team on an AI-powered tool for giving companies targeted daily insights on industry trends and global regulations, similar to the work of a human consultant.

Half a year after development began in June 2023, Lu said the team began testing a product for free with potential customers, including a manufacturer of car batteries. That has provided the feedback for a product the team hopes to charge 70,000 yuan to 100,000 yuan ($9,660 to $13,790) in annual license fees, Lu said.

But a bigger challenge can be getting companies to give AI access to proprietary data, or using AI-generated content commercially.

“I think [multinational corporations are] much more cautious than Chinese brands because of copyrights and legal issues,” Chris Reitermann, CEO of Ogilvy Asia-Pacific and Greater China, told CNBC late last year. He is also president of WPP China.

He said clients attempted to use AI for campaigns, only to run into compliance issues that prevented the projects from being launched. “Local brands, they may be a little less worried about these issues, more trial and error,” he said.

AI for global users

Some China-created AI applications are also being used overseas. Alibaba‘s international arm announced earlier this month that Accio, its AI-powered search engine for product sourcing, had reached 500,000 small business users.

Launched in November, Accio lets businesses use a few text or image prompts to find wholesale products — and provides them with analysis on their popularity with consumers and projected profit.

Accio cut the research time down from weeks to a day or so, said Mike McClary, who got early access to Accio and has sold camping lanterns and other products online for more than 10 years. McClary, CEO of amazing.com, claims e-commerce sales of more than $1 million a year and is based outside of St. Louis, Missouri.

He said Alibaba.com and Amazon, which he previously used, involved going through hundreds or thousands of results, and then individually negotiating with five to 10 suppliers before settling on one. The “next gamechanger,” McClary said, would be to use AI to put an image of a product into any scenario to create an advertisement.

German economy contracts 0.2% in 2024 in second consecutive annual slowdown
Starbucks earnings top estimates, but same-store sales decline for fourth straight quarter
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Finance

JPMorgan hired NOAA’s chief scientist to advise clients on navigating climate change

June 1, 20250
Finance

Trump tariffs would still ‘pinch’ consumers even if trade court block holds, economist says

May 31, 20250
Finance

Fed worried it could face ‘difficult tradeoffs’ if tariffs reaggravate inflation, minutes show

May 29, 20250
Load more
Read also
Finance

JPMorgan hired NOAA’s chief scientist to advise clients on navigating climate change

June 1, 20250
Economy

German inflation eases to hotter-than-expected 2.1% in May

June 1, 20250
Earnings

Zscaler jumps 10% on strong results fueled by AI growth

June 1, 20250
Business

Here are the retailers raising prices as Trump tariffs take hold

June 1, 20250
Finance

Trump tariffs would still ‘pinch’ consumers even if trade court block holds, economist says

May 31, 20250
Economy

Inflation rate slipped to 2.1% in April, lower than expected, Fed’s preferred gauge shows

May 31, 20250
Load more
© 2023, All Rights Reserved.
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Law
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions