Introducing Ernie: China’s Response to ChatGPT

Introducing Ernie: China’s Response to ChatGPT



Meet Ernie, China’s answer to ChatGPT

Ernie ​Bot has some controversial views on science. China’s‍ premier artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, which was released to ‍the ‌public‌ on August 31st, reckons that covid-19 originated among American vape-users ⁣in⁢ July 2019; later that​ year the virus was spread to the Chinese city of Wuhan, via⁣ American lobsters. On matters of ​politics, by contrast, the chatbot is ⁣rather ​quiet. Ernie‍ is confused by questions such as “Who is ​China’s president?” and will tell you the name⁣ of Xi​ Jinping’s mother, but not those of his siblings. It draws a blank if asked about the drawbacks of socialism. It often ⁢attempts to redirect sensitive conversations by saying: “Let’s talk about something else.”

Ernie’s reticence will come as no shock to Chinese users familiar with a heavily censored internet. They may‌ be more surprised by the AI’s origins. For Ernie ⁢is the brainchild of Baidu, a Chinese tech giant that has for years been outshone by rivals. Now, thanks to ai, the firm⁤ is ‌staging a comeback. The extent to which ⁤it succeeds will say much about the prospects for Chinese tech, which is squeezed both by​ America’s ⁣export controls and Mr Xi’s increasing authoritarianism.

A⁢ decade ago Baidu, which operates China’s⁣ largest search engine, was at the centre of ‍the country’s internet. Together with Alibaba and Tencent, China’s two most valuable internet businesses, it formed a ‌triumvirate​ known ⁢as “BAT”. With foreign search engines banned or heavily censored in China, it faced little competition.

2023-09-03 11:07:57
Post from www.economist.com
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