ChinAI Newsletter
A podcast by Jeffrey Ding - Mondays
85 Episodes
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“ChinAI #252: The Top 10 Events of Internet Governance in China from 2023” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 1/29/2024 -
“ChinAI #251: A surprise in the data on China’s chip imports” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 1/22/2024 -
“ChinAI #250: LLMs summarize China’s 2023 in one word” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 1/15/2024 -
“ChinAI #249: China’s idle AI computing centers” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 1/8/2024 -
“ChinAI #248: XiaoIce, where do we go from here?” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 12/18/2023 -
“ChinAI #247: XiaoIce, a Strange Species of Chatbot” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 12/11/2023 -
“ChinAI #246: The State of Large Model Governance in China” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 12/4/2023 -
“ChinAI #245: Around the Horn (13th edition)” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 11/27/2023 -
“ChinAI #244: Can Chinese Automotive Chips Overtake on the Turn?” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 11/20/2023 -
“ChinAI #243: LLM Riddles! How Many Can You Solve?” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 11/13/2023 -
“ChinAI #242: The Long Road to Speech AI (part 2)” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 10/30/2023 -
“ChinAI #241: The Long Road to Speech AI” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 10/23/2023 -
“ChinAI #239: Tiancheng Lou — China’s No. 1 Programmer” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 10/16/2023 -
“ChinAI #239: Around the Horn (12th edition)” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 10/2/2023 -
“ChinAI #238: Can China independently develop advanced lithography machines?” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 9/25/2023 -
“ChinAI #237: Safety Benchmarks for Chinese Large Models” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 9/18/2023 -
[Translation] Midfield contest between large models: who can get companies to use large models first
Published: 9/13/2023 -
“ChinAI #236: The LLM Implementation Gap” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 9/11/2023 -
“ChinAI #235: GPT Medicine Beyond Imagination” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 8/29/2023 -
“ChinAI #234: The (Privacy) Cost of Being Fabulous?” by Jeffrey Ding
Published: 8/21/2023
Narrations of the ChinAI Newsletter by Jeffrey Ding. China is becoming an indispensable part of the global AI landscape. Alongside the rise of China’s AI capabilities, a surge of Chinese writing and scholarship on AI-related topics is shedding light on a range of fascinating topics, including: China’s grand strategy for advanced technology like AI, the characteristics of key Chinese AI actors (e.g. companies and individual thinkers), and the ethical implications of AI development. While traditional media and China specialists can provide important insights on these questions through on-the-ground reporting and extensive background knowledge, ChinAI takes a different approach: it bets on the proposition that for many of these issues, the people with the most knowledge and insight are Chinese people themselves who are sharing their insights in Chinese. Through translating articles and documents from government departments, think tanks, traditional media, and newer forms of “self-media,” etc., ChinAI provides a unique look into the intersection between a country that is changing the world and a technology that is doing the same.