State-sponsored Chinese AI firm launches bot service to ‘surpass’ ChatGPT
Chinese tech company Iflytek recently made waves with the launch of its “Spark Model,” an AI system it says will surpass ChatGPT by the end of the year.
Iflytek, a state-subsidized Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) company, recently announced the launch of “Spark Model,” an AI system designed to compete directly with OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
The launch took place at a tech event in HeiFei called “Spark Desk,” and featured a full demonstration of the new system’s capabilities.
.#China's leading intelligent speech and artificial intelligence (AI) company iFLYTEK launched its generative language model on Saturday. The company said it will keep updating it to a version better than the rival ChatGPT by Oct.. pic.twitter.com/zjSrPbAXKy
— Beijing Daily (@DailyBeijing) May 8, 2023
Per a translation provided by Bing Translate, Iflytek founder and president Liu Qingfeng told event attendees that the Spark Model — also referred to as the “cognitive big model” — represented the “dawn of general artificial intelligence.”
While there’s no scientific consensus on whether general artificial intelligence (also referred to as artificial general intelligence or AGI) is even possible using current machine learning techniques, the billionaire tech mogul did offer a comparison to ChatGPT and a timeline for updates:
“This year, we will continue to upgrade the big model, and on October 10, we will surpass ChatGPT in the Chinese [language] and reach the same level as it in English.”
Details about the underlying technology powering Spark Model are scarce as of the time of this article’s publishing, but company president Liu Qingfeng described the AI’s capabilities as “far ahead of the existing system that can be measured in China.”
Direct comparisons between ChatGPT and similar models can be difficult to make without side-by-side benchmarking. Not only does OpenAI keep training details and other proprietary information under wraps, but ChatGPT is also banned in China — a fact that limits OpenAI’s ability to train its models on Chinese languages and culture.
The current ban on ChatGPT in China has been described as potentially stifling. Especially when compared to Hong Kong, a city designated as a special administrative region of the People’s Republic of China, where there’s no populace-wide ban on the use of technologies such as ChatGPT and cryptocurrency.
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In Hong Kong and throughout the West, ChatGPT has become increasingly popular among cryptocurrency users and companies for its ability to generate code and as an underlying technology for the development of advanced trading bots and portfolio analysis.
If the proposed upgrades to the Spark Model do manage to give Iflytek a leg up on OpenAI and ChatGPT, it would represent not only a monumental moment in tech (ChatGPT is widely-considered among the most powerful of today’s generative AI systems) but it will also have done so in a relatively short amount of time.
According to Liu Qingfeng, the company’s research arm began work on Spark Model just six months ago on December 22 2022. By way of comparison, OpenAI began developing the precursor to its GPT products in 2015. ChatGPT wasn’t launched until November 30, 2022.