China’s Baidu confident its AI chatbot won’t make mistakes on ‘sensitive topics’
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Baidu is waiting for government approval before launching its ChatGPT-like Ernie bot.
PHOTO: AFP
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BEIJING - Baidu’s experience in tailoring its search engine to Chinese regulatory requirements makes it confident its artificial intelligence (AI) driven chatbot will not make mistakes on “important and sensitive topics”, the company said on Tuesday.
On a call with analysts, Baidu chief executive Robin Li said the company was waiting for government approval before launching its ChatGPT-like Ernie bot.
Reuters tests have found it refuses to answer a wide range of questions on politics, particularly those pertaining to Chinese government leaders.
“For important and sensitive topics, we have to make sure artificial intelligence will not hallucinate,” Mr Li said, using the industry term for when AI models generate outputs different from what is expected.
“Given that LLM (large-language model) is more or less a probabilistic model, this task is no trouble at all,” he added, referring to the model used by many AI chatbots, such as ChatGPT and Ernie bot.
Mr Li said industry regulation was not final yet, and the company would continue to update its strategy as it evolves.
“Baidu has been operating search in China for more than 20 years and has extensive experience with Chinese culture and the regulatory environment,” he said.
“Conversely, companies which do not have extensive experience in providing appropriate online content or lacking a track record of working closely with regulators will face significant challenges.”
China’s cyberspace regulator in April unveiled draft measures to manage services driven by generative AI,
Mr Li said these measures would benefit Baidu.
“We believe that regulators’ active engagement in generative AI in the early stage will raise the bar to entry, and we are well positioned for that,” he said. REUTERS

