CHINA has reportedly immortalized President Xi Jinping and his values in the form of a chatbot powered by synthetic intelligence (AI).
The chatbot was based on President Xi’s mind and beliefs, according to the Financial Times, while citizens can’t use U. S. competition like ChatGPT.
This is the country’s new mainstream language model, as Beijing competes with the White House for dominance in the AI market.
The chatbot, cleverly dubbed “Xi PT Chat,” was based on literature provided through the regulatory body of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), the Financial Times reported, mentioning a user involved in the project.
The CCS has spearheaded the country’s regulation related to the use of generative AI and what it is capable of.
The watchdog claims that generative AI robots, such as those created through China’s Alibaba and Baidu, “embody core socialist values” and “contain any content that could subvert state power. “
For example, chatbots from Alibaba and Baidu ask users to resume verbal exchange when asked about sensitive topics.
Generative AI is a term used these days. So, let’s break it down:
The term refers to a form of AI that can generate text, images, and even videos, from the activations given to it by humans.
They do this because they rely on giant data sets, called giant language models (LLMs), which are made up of at least a billion pieces of separate information.
Chatbots necessarily regurgitate over and over again the knowledge they’ve been trained on, in other ways, depending on the question.
When an AI bot can’t answer one of your questions, or facilitate an action, it’s because it’s reached the scope of its knowledge.
However, they can be informed through further knowledge training.
China’s strict regulations mean that giant local language models are trained on English-language-based datasets.
Otherwise, their chatbots threaten values considered too Western.
Instead, the new style relied on a dataset that relies heavily on government regulations, as well as political reporting and state media, according to the Financial Times report.
In these documents, President Xi is mentioned 86,314 times.
A line in one of the documents states that chatbots will have to “ensure that in terms of thought, policy and action, we are in harmony with the Party Central Committee, with General Secretary Xi Jinping in it. “
Another said, “Let us unite more around the Party Central Committee, with Comrade Xi Jinping in it. “
You can ask questions like President Xi, create reports, summarize information, and translate between Chinese and English.
The so-called “Xi PT Chat” has lately only been used in one school under strict regulation.
However, it may be made public in the future.
Everything you want to know about the latest advances in synthetic intelligence
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