China slaps security reviews on AI products as Alibaba unveils ChatGPT challenger

Regulator warns AI-created content should embody “socialist values.”

Alibaba logos

Enlarge (credit: NurPhoto via Getty Images)

China proposed new checks on artificial intelligence chatbots on Tuesday, in an effort to control how its tech industry rolls out generative AI models, as popularized by ChatGPT in the US.

Hours after tech giant Alibaba followed its peers SenseTime and Baidu with the launch of a ChatGPT-like bot, China’s powerful Internet regulator released draft measures likely to slow Alibaba’s rollout, citing chatbots’ potential for “social mobilization.”

The Cyberspace Administration of China proposals said providers would have to submit their products for security reviews before their public release and it would set up a database to register them. The regulator also said platforms must verify users’ identities, allowing usage to be tracked.

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Lockheed Martin makes a big bet on commercial space and the Moon

“We needed a way to have a compelling commercial services offering.”

Orion, the Moon, and a crescent Earth as seen during the Artemis I mission.

Enlarge / Orion, the Moon, and a crescent Earth as seen during the Artemis I mission. (credit: NASA)

For several years NASA has made it clear to the space industry that, wherever possible, it would like to move toward a services model of buying things.

When he was administrator, Jim Bridenstine was fond of saying that NASA wanted to be "one of many customers" for companies that were building products and services for spaceflight. And with the success of the commercial cargo and crew programs for the International Space Station, the space agency has been aiming to extend this approach. It has done so in various forms, including for small and large lunar landers, as well as spacesuits for both the space station and surface of the Moon.

This transition—which has saved NASA money and seeks to leverage entrepreneurial activity in the US commercial space industry—has not been particularly easy for some of the large, traditional aerospace contractors. Typically, they were accustomed to competing for cost-plus contracts, which paid a company's expenses, plus a fee. In this new era, NASA tries to buy services at a fixed price. This means that if a company ends up delivering under that price, they keep the profit. If they go over the price, it's their loss.

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Global CTX Mosaic of Mars: Caltech stellt höchstauflösende Mars-Karte ins Netz

Das Caltech hat aus Bildern einer Sonde der Nasa eine interaktive Karte des Mars erstellt. Es ist die bisher am höchsten auflösende Karte des Nachbarplaneten. (Mars, Google Earth)

Das Caltech hat aus Bildern einer Sonde der Nasa eine interaktive Karte des Mars erstellt. Es ist die bisher am höchsten auflösende Karte des Nachbarplaneten. (Mars, Google Earth)