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  • Gaelle, what do you want me to ask ChatGPT here?

  • Ask it to tell you a joke.

  • Why did the scarecrow win an award? Because he was outstanding in his field.

  • Fantastic.

  • Now ask it if it thinks Chinese president Xi Jinping is a good leader.

  • ChatGPT lays out the fact that Xi Jinping has received criticism as well as

  • being praised by people around the world. But it says ultimately, it's up to individuals to decide

  • whether Xi Jinping is a good leader or not.

  • I spent just over 3 years in China, covering the country's tech space.

  • China heavily censors controversial content on the internet and

  • several foreign internet services are blocked. So when I found out that Chinese firms were

  • looking to create their own ChatGPT rivals, I was thinking 'How will that look exactly?'

  • Mainland China has a unique internet landscapeone that is heavily censored and regulated.

  • Users in mainland China require a virtual private network, or VPN, to access some of

  • the world's most popular websites in order to evade the country's internet control system,

  • known as the Great Firewall. While ChatGPT isn't officially banned in China, when Chinese tech

  • giants launch their rival products, they will no doubt be under the watchful gaze of Beijing.

  • From the perspective of the Beijing government, it essentially faces a dilemma.

  • Xin Sun is a senior lecturer on Chinese and East Asian business at Kings College London.

  • So, on the one hand, it needs to make sure that Chinese firms are catching up with

  • tech developments you know, with Western counterparts. But also, on the other hand,

  • the full implication of this new technology has not been fully understood.

  • I'm here chatting away with ChatGPT,

  • a viral chatbot which sparked massive interest across the world in 2023.

  • Developed by American company OpenAI, ChatGPT is an example of generative artificial intelligence,

  • effectively AI that's able to generate content. You can ask it questions and it'll

  • give you responses based on the massive amount of data the AI is trained on.

  • I'm particularly interested in its responses to my questions about China. My first question:

  • Is ChatGPT worrying to the Chinese government? ChatGPT says that it may be of concern if

  • it and other AI language modelsare being used to spread false information or to engage

  • in activities that are deemed to be against Chinese law or interests.” ChatGPT said that

  • Beijing may also be interested inmonitoring or regulatingsuch AI products to make sure

  • they'renot being used in ways that could pose a threat to national security or social stability.

  • This has potential implications in like social media, searching, education, and essentially

  • every area of information processing, right. So the government wants to adopt an attitude of,

  • okay, wait and see, let's allow some development of the new technology,

  • but let's put a close eye on what's going on, and what firms are doing. So as to make sure you know,

  • whenever there is new, applications coming out, they can deal with it. And the deal

  • with the potential political implications. Despite the Chinese government's concerns,

  • Chinese tech companies are pushing ahead with the development of their own chatbots.

  • Chinese search giant Baidu has launched its ChatGPT rival called

  • Ernie Bot which can do things like generate images from text and write pieces of literature.

  • Alibaba has taken the wraps off Tongyi Qianwen, an AI chatbot that can provide

  • recipes and tell children's stories as well as take meeting notes and draft business proposals.

  • Other tech giants including Tencent and NetEase have all

  • said they're working on ChatGPT-style products.

  • Now we couldn't get our hands on a test version

  • of a Chinese chatbot because they require a Chinese ID card and phone number to sign up,

  • which we don't have. But some reporters in China had a chance to try them out.

  • Several reports suggest Baidu's Ernie Bot will end conversations at the mention of Chinese President

  • Xi Jinping and says that it has not yet learned how to answer such a query. Other conversations

  • about politically sensitive topics are also shut down. ChatGPT in comparison

  • was okay handling queries about Xi Jinping. Chinese giants have carefully crafted their

  • announcements around their AI chatbots. Instead of talking about this open-ended ChatGPT competitor,

  • they are talking about generative AI in specific contexts, for example, for business

  • or for creating literature. They need to move extremely

  • cautiously. If anything we have learned from the massive tech crackdown experienced by

  • Chinese tech sector over the past years, we know that from now, they need to avoid

  • being perceived by the government as building a business empire, that doing businesses across

  • different lines. The more specific in terms of their product, the more certainty they

  • will deliver to the regulators, and that they will be able to more credibly signal,

  • 'Okay, I'm harmless.' It's not like I'm developing any disruptive technology. Right. So I think this is

  • a regulatory concern. And uncertainty has been the major factor behind what they're doing right now.

  • That point about regulation is key. The Chinese government started clamping down on its domestic

  • tech sector in late 2020. This covered areas from data protection to antitrust, wiping billions of

  • dollars off their value. It created an environment of uncertainty for tech giants, which had to

  • move cautiously with new projects, especially those with the potential to concern Beijing.

  • But as part of the regulatory crackdown, the Chinese government has also introduced some

  • pretty groundbreaking laws. One of those laws governs so-called deep synthesis technology, which

  • is basically AI-generated content, which is exactly what ChatGPT and its clones are attempting to do.

  • In April 2023, Chinese regulators released draft measures to manage generative AI.

  • The ground rules say content created by this AI should reflect the core values of socialism

  • and must not undermine state power. Paul Triolo is the technology policy

  • lead at consulting firm Albright Stonebridge. China, I think, has tried to get ahead of this

  • regulatory curve by passing these regulations that are targeting very specific AI kinds

  • of applications. And in a sense, they're ahead of Western efforts, which tend to be

  • focused on things like bias and safety of AI algorithms. The Chinese approach has been to

  • give regulators, at least, the ability to look at these algorithms, and determine whether they're,

  • you know, causing consumer harm or some very specific kind of application. But I think the

  • ChatGPT, the emergence of this, as suddenly, as such a big issue is going to put a lot

  • of pressure on regulators to figure out how to deal with this because the technology is

  • moving forward at such a rapid pace. And so now there's going to be a scramble in China,

  • I think, among regulators to figure out, you know, how do we really get a handle on this.

  • What's at play here, of course, is a broader battle for tech supremacy between the U.S. and China.

  • With Artificial Intelligence being the key technology that both nations want to dominate.

  • This is now the new frontier, if you will, of U.S.-China AI competition,

  • if that's the meme you want to use. Because I don't think the Chinese government is going to allow

  • U.S.-generated ChatGPT versions to enter China and vice versa, right. I mean,

  • the U.S. government is probably equally as concerned of what about the potential for, you know, TikTok,

  • or ByteDance to use generative AI models.

  • So what does this all mean for China's

  • ChatGPT rivals on the world stage? Can they find success abroad?

  • Many of extremely popular Chinese apps like Tencent and WeChat, their overseas market share has

  • been very limited, right? So this is a fundamental challenge, whether overseas customers,

  • the Western customers are happy to acceptproduct that that involve, like a heavily censored

  • information. So I think Chinese companies may have some advantages in relatively niche sectors,

  • but a much more general product like ChatGPT — I think Chinese companies have a very long way to go.

Gaelle, what do you want me to ask ChatGPT here?

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