Hong Kong: As the world goes gaga over an AI chatbot called ChatGPT, experts believe that developing its Chinese competitor will surely face censorship, cost and data challenges, as in the case of big Internet companies like Alibaba and Tencent, the media reported on Monday. According to the South China Morning Post, a recent white paper published by the municipal technology bureau of Beijing offered support to local companies in developing ChatGPT rivals.
"But this will be easier said than done, owing to differences in the structure of the English and Chinese languages, cost pressures, availability of data sets, and last but not least - the thorny issue of censorship in China," the report noted. "Censorship could certainly hinder China's ability to develop a local equivalent to ChatGPT," Dahlia Peterson, a research analyst at Georgetown University's Center for Security and Emerging Technology (CSET), was quoted as saying.
Even if (Chinese) AI companies are able to access and utilise global data and research resources to train their AI models, "it is unlikely the Chinese authorities will allow them to use any material deemed as politically sensitive in their replies", she stressed. China's ruling Communist Party has always controlled the flow of political and social discussion within the country.
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