Can China create a world-beating AI industry?

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Government capital combined with access to plentiful public data has helped turn Chinese AI firms into powerhouses in certain niches

The system, whose name means “enlightenment” and which can emulate lowlier types of speech, derives its power from a neural network with 1.75trn variables and other inputs.-3, a similar model built a year earlier by a team of researchers in San Francisco and deemed impressive at the time, considered just 175bn parameters. As such Wu Dao represents a leap in this type of machine learning, which tries to emulate the workings of the human brain.

Look beyond the headlines or Wu Dao’s elegant verses, however, and things look more complicated. Yes, China has made progress on, and even the occasional big splash like Wu Dao. But it almost certainly still lags behind America in terms of both investment and cutting-edge innovation. In 2020, three years into the master plan, privately held Chinesefirms received less than half as much investment as their American counterparts.

Elements of the Communist Party’s approach are characteristically prescriptive. The Ministry of Science and Technology has instructed China’s tech giants with existing ventures in certain subdisciplines of—Tencent in medical image recognition, Baidu in autonomous driving—to double down on these. That said, the plan is less hands-on than some of the country’s other development projects, observes Jay Huang of Bernstein, an investment firm.

Even more problematic for the party, its master plan ignored the cutting-edge semiconductors that power. Since its publication Chinese companies have found it ever more difficult to get their hands on advanced computer chips. That is because virtually all such microprocessors are either American or made with American equipment. As such, they are subject to restrictions on exports to China put in place by Donald Trump and extended by his successor as president, Joe Biden.

These challenges will continue to bedevil all of China’s high-tech industries for years to come. It could leave itsbusinesses stuck in a rut—successfully rolling out relatively unsophisticated products while trailing Europe and America in paradigm-shifting developments of greater financial and strategic value. Consider Wu Dao 2.0. Although it was a huge improvement on-3, it did just that—improve an existing technology rather than break new ground.

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Short answer: YES.

This is dangerous China 🇨🇳 is the most dangerous country in the world 🌎 Watch how they take Taiwan 🇹🇼 as they have their planes ready They will surpass us 🇺🇸 soon if we do not wake up Xi CCP. Have goals and they are persistent

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