Chinese AI adds new spin to Milano Winter Olympics

Chinese tech firms are using AI to showcase innovative broadcasting at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. As American figure skater Ilia Malinin performed a quad jump, viewers saw a novel replay with orbiting frames. This reflects a push for global expansion amid domestic competition.

At the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, Chinese tech firms are using artificial intelligence to showcase their capabilities to a global audience. As American figure skater Ilia Malinin launched into a quad—a jump with four airborne revolutions—this month, millions of television viewers saw something brand new: a replay of the jump separated into frames that appeared to orbit the athlete.

Backed by Chinese AI firms, this also reflects a broader push for overseas expansion amid increasingly fierce competition in China. The real-time 360-degree replay tools, combined with stroboscopic motion analysis, are supported by Chinese tech giant Alibaba’s cloud AI systems, which have featured at multiple recent Games. Alibaba, a worldwide Olympic partner, is the owner of the South China Morning Post.

Besides helping viewers gain a better understanding of an athlete’s performance, AI-enabled camera technology has allowed broadcasters to focus on specific competitors, delivering tailored live coverage alongside split-screen views and up-to-the-second data in sports like biathlon—which combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting—according to the International Olympic Committee.

“For us, it’s not sufficient to produce very high-quality coverage just for dedicated sports fans,” said Olympic Broadcasting Services CEO Yiannis Exarchos at a news conference on February 11. “We have a very short period of time to make the sports understandable and attractive. We need to get people engaged.”

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