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HomeBusinessAlibaba’s A.I. Strikes Back: Here’s How China is Changing the A.I. Game

Alibaba’s A.I. Strikes Back: Here’s How China is Changing the A.I. Game

In the dynamic battlefield of Artificial Intelligence, where each tech titan strives to outdo another, Alibaba Holdings Limited (NYSE:BABA) dropped a major bombshell: Qwen-VL and Qwen-VL-Chat. This came hot on the heels of Meta Platforms Inc’s (NASDAQ:META) recent A.I. launch.

Alibaba’s Double A.I. Whammy

Unlike text-centric A.I. models such as Microsoft Corporation’s (NASDAQ:MSFT) ChatGPT or Google Bard, Alibaba’s innovations delve into the visual realm. Here’s the intriguing part:

Qwen-VL-Chat: Not only can it interpret and act on images, but it can also narrate stories based on them, provide instructions from street visuals, and even decode math problems using them.
Qwen-VL: It’s the next-gen version of Alibaba’s image-reading bot, boasting heightened resolution.
From Handy to Revolutionary

What’s even more captivating is how Alibaba foresees these models reshaping the world for the visually impaired. Imagine an AI bot narrating product labels for someone who can’t see them – that’s the kind of potential Alibaba is tapping into.

The Meta-Alibaba Dynamics

Although Alibaba is taking rapid strides, Meta is still leading the race in terms of AI muscle, with its Llama 2 model, which was recently fine-tuned to generate and rectify computer code, being a testament to its prowess. This model, though tenfold larger than Alibaba’s latest offerings, saw an unexpected collaboration when it made its way to the Chinese marketplace through Alibaba’s cloud unit.

But don’t get too comfortable – rumors are rife about Meta crafting a behemoth model to rival GPT-4, another masterpiece backed by Microsoft.

The Global AI Tug of War

China has been vocal about the pivotal role A.I. plays in its technological vision. But as of now, Chinese tech moguls are playing catch-up with their American counterparts. Yet, this disparity hasn’t gone unnoticed. Speculations from Fortune.com suggest that the U.S. is wary of China harnessing private firm AI advancements for military endeavors.

In the aftermath of Alibaba’s most significant reshuffle, CEO Eddie Wu has been fervent in expressing the company’s resolve. Alibaba isn’t just keen on joining the AI race – it’s determined to lead.

In this ever-accelerating AI rivalry, one thing’s clear: The tech world should brace itself for more surprises.

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