Alibaba opens AI model Tongyi Qianwen to public in competition with Baidu, Tencent and other Chinese Big Tech firms

In This Article:

Alibaba Group Holding's cloud computing unit has opened its large language model (LLM) Tongyi Qianwen to the public, following a slew of similar moves by other local technology companies that received the government's approval to launch commercial ChatGPT-like services.

In an article published on WeChat on Wednesday, Alibaba Group Intelligence Group said it aimed to "let every ordinary person and enterprise benefit from LLMs", the technology that underpins cutting-edge artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots like OpenAI's ChatGPT.

Alibaba Cloud started a beta test of Tongyi Qianwen in April. It has since worked with other Alibaba units, such as e-commerce platform Taobao and work communications tool DingTalk, as well as outside companies like smartphone brand Oppo, to train their own LLMs or develop applications based on Tongyi Qianwen, Alibaba Cloud said.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.

The Chinese government in late August lifted its tight lid on the country's aspirational ChatGPT rivals, giving the green light for several generative AI services to be released to the public in a crowded market where ChatGPT and Google's Bard are not officially available. It came two weeks after authorities enacted national regulations on the technology.

The approved services include internet search giant Baidu's Ernie Bot, as well as those from AI specialist SenseTime, Sogou founder Wang Xiaochuan's new venture Baichuan and state-backed start-up Zhipu AI, among others.

Chinese social media and video gaming giant Tencent Holdings also launched its AI foundation model Hunyuan last week.

Alibaba Group is elevating AI to one of its two main strategic focuses, according to an internal letter sent to employees on Tuesday by new CEO Eddie Wu Yongming, who on Sunday also took over as head of Alibaba Cloud when former group chairman and CEO Daniel Zhang Yong unexpectedly relinquished his role at the cloud unit.

"Over the next decade, the most significant change agent will be the disruptions brought about by AI across all sectors," Wu wrote.

Alibaba Cloud, which is set to be spun off into an independent, publicly-listed company next year under its parent company's sweeping restructuring plan, has seen significant personnel changes in recent months.