• wx
    分享到微信

    用微信“扫一扫”,点击右上角分享按钮,
    即可将网页分享给您的微信好友或朋友圈。

Chinese internet search giant Baidu plans to launch a ChatGPT-style bot in March, source says

Baidu is planning to roll out an artificial intelligence chatbot service similar to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, according to a person familiar with the matter, potentially China’s most prominent entry in a race touched off by the tech phenomenon.


China’s largest search engine company plans to debut a ChatGPT-style application in March, initially embedding it into its main search services, said the person, asking to remain unidentified discussing private information. The tool, whose name has not been decided, will allow users to get conversation-style search results much like OpenAI’s popular platform.


Baidu has spent billions of dollars researching AI in a years-long effort to transition from online marketing to deeper technology. Its Ernie system – a large-scale machine-learning model that is been trained on data over several years – will be the foundation of its upcoming ChatGPT-like tool, the person said. A Baidu representative declined to comment.


ChatGPT, OpenAI’s artificial intelligence tool, has lit up the internet since its public debut in November, amassing more than a million users within days and touching off a debate about the role of AI in schools, offices and homes. Companies including Microsoft are investing billions to try and develop real-world applications, while others are capitalising on the hype to raise funds. Buzzfeed’s shares more than doubled this month after it announced plans to incorporate ChatGPT in its content.


Baidu, Alibaba Group Holding, Tencent Holdings and ByteDance control much of China’s internet. The search company has been trying to revive growth in the mobile era, after increasingly lagging its larger rivals in arenas such as mobile advertising, video and social media. Apart from research in AI, the search giant is now also developing autonomous driving technology.


ChatGPT also piqued the interest of Chinese internet users, who like people elsewhere shared screenshots of surprising conversations with the AI bot on local social media. That is despite a heavily censored domestic internet largely walled off from the rest of the world, a model that is helped companies like Baidu thrive as local equivalents to Google, Amazon and Facebook.


Apart from Baidu, several Chinese start-ups are also exploring generative AI, and have attracted investors such as Sequoia and Sinovation Ventures.


Read Also
Vietnam braces for surge in data centre demand as foreign players enter market
China Mobile Joins Force with Angang Steel to Develop Cloud Computing and Data Center
Johor – the new centre for data storage

Research