Alibaba scientist sees less than 20% chance for China to exceed US in AI

At the AGI-Next summit in Beijing, Alibaba AI scientist Lin Junyang warned that China has less than a 20% chance of exceeding the US in artificial intelligence over the next 3 to 5 years due to resource limits. He pointed out the gap, with US firms like OpenAI pouring massive computational resources into next-generation research while China is stretched thin just meeting daily demands.

At the AGI-Next summit hosted by Tsinghua University in Beijing's Zhongguancun technology hub, Lin Junyang joined a panel with Tang Jie, co-founder and chief AI scientist at Zhipu AI, known internationally as Z.ai. Lin highlighted China's challenges with chip deficits and resource limits in AI development. Third-party benchmarks show Chinese models have narrowed the performance gap with leading US models in recent years, though US models remain largely closed-source while Chinese developers have open-sourced theirs, boosting global adoption.

Lin stated: “Most critically, OpenAI and others are pouring massive computational resources into next-generation research. Meanwhile, in China, we are stretched to the limit just from meeting daily demand, which already takes up the vast majority of our compute.” Tang lent support to this cautious view.

Some experts predict breakthroughs for China within five years. Top Chinese AI scientists warn of chip shortages and resource constraints, yet acknowledge that open-sourcing drives international influence.

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Chinese Premier Li Qiang delivering a speech at the Summer Davos forum about AI governance.
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Chinese premier says China will continue participating in global AI governance

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Chinese Premier Li Qiang said on Wednesday at the Summer Davos forum in Dalian that China will continue to participate in global governance on artificial intelligence and other domains in a responsible and constructive manner.

China's Zhengzhou core node has doubled its chips to 60,000 from 30,000 since early February trials, becoming the nation's most powerful scientific intelligent computing infrastructure, CCTV reported.

Ti AI ṣe iroyin

At the inaugural Hong Kong Global AI Governance Conference at the University of Hong Kong, Alibaba policy lead Fu Hongyu said China is at the front lines of global AI guardrails. He described a ‘common ignorance’ dilemma, unsure of AI’s direction.

Shenzhen-based EngineAI is leveraging Hong Kong as a springboard for global expansion, planning a local listing this year while using its computing power to enter the North American market. The company's robots have been bought by Mideast firms and require cloud-based computing accessible from anywhere.

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