Over the past few months we’ve taken a look at what China’s cleantech industry hopes to achieve in the race to reach carbon neutrality. We’ve focused on specific technologies, promising technologies, and government plans.
Now, in the last edition of our cleantech newsletter series, we ask: where is the money coming from?
In Focus: Cleantech is TechNode’s monthly in-focus newsletter looking China’s push to clean up its environment using technology. Available to TechNode Squared members.
This is the last issue of In Focus: Cleantech. Thanks for reading, and stay tuned for updates on our premium newsletters.
China has long been synonymous with pollution. The country’s journey from an agrarian society to an industrialized one took decades, rather than centuries. The cost of this speed is polluted waterways, smog-filled skies, and contaminated soil.
Since the early 2000s rampant industrialization has slowly (mostly very slowly) been giving way to the notion that sustainability, rather than growth at all costs, should be a priority.
The move to cut emissions came to a head in September last year when China’s current president, Xi Jinping, announced plans to reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060.
It had a marked effect. When the Chinese government backs an agenda, it ripples through society—and completely transforms industries. Xi’s pledge has led China’s companies to publish carbon neutrality plans, pledge to cut emissions, and look to find ways to fund green initiatives.
So what’s next for cleantech in China? In the last edition of this newsletter we look into the money side of the industry. Companies are exploring ways to raise money to back their ambitious plans to go green through innovative methods such as green bonds, green VC and carbon markets.
Since Xi’s speech, some of China’s biggest tech companies have released plans to reach carbon neutrality—without much detail. This is likely to continue as governments, both local and national, exert pressure on firms as carbon deadlines near, requiring them to fund their own green transformations. The promises create some accountability, allowing the public to hold them to their stated goals.
Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group has vowed to hit carbon net zero by 2030. JD Logistics and Baidu have pledged to go completely renewable by the same year. Tencent has announced that it has a plan for eventual carbon neutrality, without a timeline.
But none have laid out concrete plans detailing how they will reach these goals. Key to reaching carbon neutrality will be lowering their carbon emissions in data centers. In China’s competitive tech sector, data is power—but it also requires a lot of electricity..
In 2018, data centers in China used 161 terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity, according to 2019 research by Greenpeace and the North China Electric Power University. That’s enough to power a mid-sized nation, and is four times higher than New Zealand’s total energy consumption in 2018.
If the electricity came from renewable sources, this wouldn’t be a problem. For the most part, it doesn’t, and increasing the amount of renewable energy tech companies use will be a significant focus in the next few years.
Developing new technologies is expensive. But so is going green. Chinese companies are looking for ways to fund their environmentally friendly initiatives.
One answer is green bonds, in which companies sell bonds to finance eco-friendly projects. They’re not new in China, but they are novel among Chinese tech companies. This avenue of funding could provide a way for China’s big tech company to go green without taking money out of their R&D coffers.
Baidu is one of the first tech companies to go this way. Earlier this month, the company raised $1 billion in a green bond sale, the proceeds of which could be used to build energy-efficient data centers and office buildings, electric self-driving cars, and greening its supply chain, all of which were key features in a carbon neutrality plan the company released in June.
Baidu is not alone. More broadly, Chinese companies are looking at the green bond mechanism. Between April and June this year, companies in China issued more green bonds than in the previous two years, reaching $18.1 billion, according to the Climate Bonds Initiative.
But a review of how these bonds work is needed to make them more effective. Guidelines from China’s central planner allow up to half of the money raised from these green bond sales to be used for purposes other than sustainability projects, which could make “greenwashing” a systematic problem.
Not every company can sell bonds to fund green expansion plans. For cleantech startups, raising money is key, and several VCs in China are looking for the next big thing in environmentally friendly technology. China-focused VCs are signalling that they are gearing up for new rounds of cleantech investments, which could lead to a boom in the industry.
In March, cleantech company Envision Group and venture capital firm Sequoia Capital China set up a carbon neutrality tech fund worth RMB 10 billion (around $1.5 billion). “The fund will cooperate with enterprises and governments to create a carbon-neutral technology innovation ecosystem,” the companies said in a statement.
Also in March, GCL Energy Technology and CICC Capital, an arm of China Capital Investment Group, launched a RMB 10 billion fund. The fund will focus on decarbonizing the auto sector and will raise around RMB 4 billion in its first phase, China Daily reported on March 31.
Another venture investor is Tsing Capital. The firm has backed a slew of startups that have become household names in cleantech, including drone maker eHang, China Hydro, and US-based Lucid Motors.
While these are small compared to the government-backed funds in China, they do point to a larger trend of venture capital firms and corporate VCs looking to back upcoming cleantech companies that aim to solve novel environmental issues.
In July, China launched its long-awaited national carbon trading platform, expecting 2,000 power stations to take part in the first phase of trading. It didn’t work out quite as planned: the government gave out too many credits and the price of each credit has fallen below the amount they were trading at when the exchange first opened.
If expanded and reformed, the carbon trading platform could significantly reduce Chinese companies’ carbon emissions and create a way for them to make green plans profitable by selling off excess carbon credits.
Currently, China’s trading scheme has no cap on how many emissions permits can be bought and sold. “The Emissions Trading Scheme, as it is currently designed, will have a very marginal impact on [reducing] emissions,” said Li Shuo, a policy adviser at Greenpeace China. “A cap-and-trade system without absolute emissions-based trading benchmarks is a convoluted exercise.”
Officials appear to be open to changing the way the system works over time, so long as it doesn’t put too much financial pressure on businesses. In the next few years, reforming the system and putting caps in place, while also opening the market up to companies outside of the energy sector, could have more of an effect on carbon emissions in China.
]]>Baidu practically owns search in China, controlling nearly 80% of the sector. Its closest competitor, Sogou, holds just 11%. There’s just one problem: web search isn’t the cash cow it used to be, and Chinese internet users now spend more time in apps.
Advertising revenue is the primary source of income for search companies, and Baidu’s ad business has seen growth slow to a crawl over the past few years, with a few quarterly exceptions. The AI giant has been hamstrung by the decline of web search, rising competition from rivals like ByteDance and Alibaba, and accusations of bad behavior like prioritizing its own search results and allowing ads for questionable medical treatments.
Insights is a series of explainers on developing stories in China tech, available to TechNode subscribers.
The company is trying a full-blown pivot, even telling people it’s no longer a search company. The story it’s telling now is about AI.
“As we enter 2021, Baidu is well positioned as a leading AI company with a strong internet foundation to seize the huge market opportunities in cloud services, autonomous driving, smart transportation, and other AI opportunities,” Baidu CEO Robin Li said in the company’s fourth-quarter earnings report.
And it could be working. Baidu’s new businesses have grown and the company’s investments in new technologies are starting to mature. In 2018, non-ad revenue made up just 17% of its sales. Now, more than a third of the company’s revenue comes from its other businesses, including enterprise services like AI cloud and its consumer-facing smart speaker business.
Bottom line: Baidu really is changing. It still gets most of its revenue from search and advertising, but cloud services are driving growth and now account for a substantial part of revenue. The company’s long-term plays on AI and autos could pay off in a few years.
Beginnings in search: Founded in 2000 as a search engine, Baidu quickly became a household name, growing alongside China’s ballooning internet population. At the time, there were just 22 million internet users.
Ten years later, that number was nearly 460 million—and Baidu’s search business was booming. Between 2009 and 2010, the company’s ad sales increased by nearly 75% to reach RMB 7.9 billion.
Along with Alibaba and Tencent, Baidu was synonymous with big tech in China: the three companies were collectively known as BAT, much like FAANG—Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google—in the US.
A staggering giant: But in the last few years growth has mostly slowed. In 2020, Tencent overtook Baidu in digital ad revenue for the first time, according to market research firm eMarketer. Analysts now typically count Baidu out of the tech major leagues in China, even proposing that ByteDance replace the company in the BAT triumvirate.
Slowing search: Web search in general has declined, and information is often confined within apps. Internet users now engage more with content in WeChat, Xiaohongshu, and Douyin.
In the first quarter of 2019, Baidu reported a quarterly net loss for the first time since it went public in 2005.
Advertising’s not out: While the proportion of revenue that comes from advertising has shrunk, it still currently makes up the majority of Baidu’s total—and search encompasses a large part of that.
The company currently makes money by selling ads that get displayed with search results or on other platforms like newsfeed and search app Baidu App and Reddit-like community platform Baidu Post.
The company’s mobile ecosystem, which includes Baidu App, user-generated, medium length video platform Haokan, and Baidu Post, is a large driver of its growth, Baidu said in its Hong Kong IPO prospectus.
Baidu is betting on two new areas to secure growth: cloud services; and “other” initiatives, including intelligent driving, mapping, smart devices, and AI chips.
Li said that non-ad businesses, including cloud and its other growth initiatives, could become its primary source of income over the next three years during Baidu’s May earnings call.
Baidu, the cloud company? Cloud services drive a major portion of Baidu’s current growth. The company restructured in 2018 to place greater emphasis on cloud computing and artificial intelligence. In an internal note at the time, Baidu’s Li wrote that the company sees these businesses as the cradle of “new growth engines.”
Push for AI: Baidu has invested heavily in AI since 2010, hoping that it will propel future initiatives like intelligent and autonomous driving. The technology is currently used in the majority of the company’s products, including its cloud and search businesses.
Taking on chips: AI is only as effective as the hardware it runs on. In 2018, Baidu announced that it was developing its own AI chip.
Future mobility: Projects related to autonomous vehicles and robotaxis make up a significant portion of Baidu’s bet on future revenue. The company hasn’t yet made its own cars. Instead, it’s been focusing on a self-driving package called Apollo it hopes other automakers will license and put in their own vehicles.
Bets on electric: Baidu is also making moves into China’s crowded electric vehicle industry. In April, the company partnered with automaker Geely to produce smart EVs.
So far, so good: Since the company has decided to go all-in on AI, its year-on-year growth has increased dramatically, but this may also be as a result of China’s Covid-19 recovery.
China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, the guys are joined by Kendra Schaefer, partner at Trivium China and head of the firm’s tech practice. They dig into the ever-evolving saga at Didi, whose decision to go through with a US IPO against Beijing’s wishes has brought about waves of regulatory wrath against the ride-hailing and mobility giant. Kendra’s insights are helpful for investors, analysts, or anyone hoping to understand the new rules of the road for China’s tech firms.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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Renewables can produce an almost limitless supply of energy—but only sometimes. The result is that, even if 40% of your installed capacity is renewable, on a cloudy, windless day the majority of your power could come from coal.
To combat this problem, energy needs to be put in the bank when you have too much, so that it can be used when there is too little renewable power being generated.
By the end of 2020, China had installed 500 million megawatts of solar and wind capacity—the equivalent to 15 billion solar panels or 206,000 utility-scale wind turbines. In the next decade, the country wants to double that figure.
In Focus: Cleantech is TechNode’s monthly in-focus newsletter looking China’s push to clean up its environment using technology. Available to TechNode Squared members.
This renewable drive forms part of China’s goals of reaching carbon neutrality by 2060. The country aims for renewable power to account for 50% of its total installed electrical capacity by 2025, up from 42% this year (in Chinese).
But just 0.7% of all the solar and wind power China creates can currently be stored. As the country moves to increase its share of renewable energy, the government is taking action to allow energy storage to keep up.
The National Energy Administration this year mandated that new renewable projects need to include energy storage capacity. Regional governments including those in Hunan, Qinghai, Inner Mongolia, and Guizhou have created similar mandates. New renewable projects need to be able to store at least 5% of the energy they produce in these areas.
For China, deploying energy storage systems is crucial for renewables to compete with fossil fuels. China’s energy administration set the country’s first national target for new energy storage earlier this year, aiming to increase the country’s current capacity nearly eightfold to 30GW in 2025 from 3.8GW last year.
There’s no golden ratio of renewables to energy storage. Experts are mostly talking about how much energy storage will have to cost in order for countries to go 100% renewable.
In this week’s newsletter we take a look at how energy storage works, and how it forms an important piece of China’s carbon neutrality puzzle.
The government is leading the charge in rolling out energy storage facilities, with state-owned utility companies building out the majority of capacity. The private sector, including battery makers like BYD and CATL, are involved in smaller, localized facilities.
In China, the most widespread form of energy storage is pumped hydro, making up more than 90% of all storage capacity. But other forms of energy storage, such as batteries, flywheel, and compressed air storage, are catching up as the country’s wind and solar installations grow.
Storage methods like pumped hydro are not as efficient as batteries, but that might not matter as energy from these sources could become abundant at peak production times.
The power of water: Pumped hydro is a form of storage that allows power to be saved by pumping water from a low-lying reservoir to an elevated one when electricity demand is low. The water can then be released to generate electricity when demand is high.
Electrochemical storage: Of the numerous ways to store energy, batteries are one of the most important for storing energy from wind and solar farms. The batteries are much like the ones you find in electric vehicles, your phone or your computer, only much larger in scale.
Some of the world’s biggest battery makers are Chinese. Growing off the back of the county’s electric vehicle (EV) push, BYD and CATL, which predominantly make batteries for EVs, have started making major inroads into energy storage.
Earlier this month CATL signed a deal with gas utility Towngas to set up a joint venture to install energy storage systems in industrial parks. BYD and CATL provide commercial and grid-scale energy storage systems for renewable sources.
Pumped hydro and batteries make up the majority of energy storage capacity in China, but there are other technologies state planners have earmarked that haven’t yet taken off.
Motion batteries: While still limited in their use, flywheels have been highlighted by China’s government as an effective way to store energy. These devices store rotational energy by spinning heavy wheels at high speeds.
Compressed air: Using compressed air to store energy goes back decades, but it is still seen as an effective way to stockpile energy. Electricity is used to compress air, often in large underground chambers. When energy is needed, air is released to drive a turbine that creates electricity.
As locations for pumped hydro become more difficult to find, China is likely to deploy a lot more batteries to store energy over the next five years. But batteries present a problem in the long term: they’re dirty and battery recycling has yet to really take off. It will be worth keeping an eye on flywheels and compressed air as China pushes toward carbon neutrality.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode the guys welcome Emma Lee back to discuss MissFresh and Dingdong Maicai. Key topics include what grocery e-commerce is, who the players in the space are, how they are different, and more. Elliott and James also discuss Didi Global. The conversation with Emma Lee was recorded on July 1, 2021 and the rest of the episode was recorded on July 2, 2021.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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“We are now in a golden era for hydrogen,” Robin Lin, CEO of fuel cell producer Refire, declared during a speech at the China Auto Forum in Shanghai last year.
Lin would know. His company made fuel cells before they were cool. When Refire was founded in 2015 it was a small, specialized market.
In Focus: Cleantech is TechNode’s monthly in-focus newsletter looking China’s push to clean up its environment using technology. Available to TechNode Squared members.
But over the past two years, its prospects have exploded. Hydrogen technology is fast gaining attention in China as a viable alternative to the fossil fuels used in vehicles and heavy industries. Fuel cells are a dense, efficient, and clean way to store energy. Among the most popular prospects at the moment are fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEVs).
To proponents, hydrogen is the future of green fuel. Compared to gasoline, it emits only water. Compared to batteries, it leaves nothing to recycle.
China’s push for hydrogen energy looks much like its ambitions for electric vehicles when they were first set out. The country’s nascent hydrogen drive has led to an increasing number of companies researching and developing hydrogen technologies.
The expanding market has led to a series of hydrogen companies, including Refire, filing to go public. In March, Refire filed to list on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-like STAR Market.
For this week’s newsletter, we profile one of the Chinese companies that stand to benefit most from China’s push for hydrogen.
Hydrogen fuels cells are an efficient, clean form of energy storage. Use electricity to isolate the gas, and then you can deploy it to power a car in a reaction that’s cleaner than fossil fuels and requires less heavy equipment than battery electrics. It even has applications in energy-intensive industries like the steel sector.
The hydrogen used in these fuel cells is rarely found in its pure form, and needs to be extracted from water, coal, or natural gas. But producing it in an environmentally friendly way is currently expensive.
While hydrogen fuel cell technology is less mature than electric vehicle (EV) batteries, it has some advantages over batteries. Fuel cells vehicles can be refueled in a few minutes much like gas-driven cars unlike EVs, which can take up to a few hours to recharge, depending on the grading of the charging pile. They are also more energy dense than batteries.
Hydrogen fuel cells are less energy-efficient than batteries—you need more electricity to deliver the same amount of power when using hydrogen. In a world where renewables like solar and wind are producing vast amounts of surplus energy during off-peak hours, that might not be a problem, but right now most hydrogen comes from fossil fuels.
EVs are around a decade ahead of fuel cell vehicles, given China’s advanced charging infrastructure. For now, hydrogen fuel cell vehicles are confined to testing zones.
Refire is one of China’s largest fuel cell manufacturers. The company produces fuel cell systems, the heart of FCEVs, for commercial vehicles, which require large amounts of power and quick refueling times—both strengths of fuel cells compared to batteries.
Established in 2015, Refire designs and manufactures a range of fuel cell systems for heavy vehicles of up to 49 tons, including mixer trucks, buses, dump trucks, and truck tractors. It’s customers include trucks maker FAW Jiefang, auto manufacturer Dongfeng, and busmaker Yutong.
Refire declined to comment for this story, citing a pre-IPO quiet period.
The company began mass producing its first fuel cell system for light-duty commercial vehicles in 2017, manufacturing 1,000 within 18 months. The company has since launched a new line of fuel cell systems, the most powerful of which can drive heavy-duty vehicles.
While not widely adopted, Refire’s fuel cells have been deployed commercially in 2,700 vehicles in 15 cities across China, and have collectively driven more than 63 million kilometers, according to the company. Refire currently produces around 1,000 fuel cell systems a year, used by automakers in buses and trucks. For comparison, the Beijing government aims to deploy 10,000 fuel cell vehicles on its roads by 2024.
The company has set up two manufacturing plants, one in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong and the other in Jiangsu, in eastern China. Both aim to drastically increase capacity. The company expects to initially build 20,000 fuel cell systems a year at the new Jiangsu plant.
As China starts to promote hydrogen fuel cell vehicles with more fervor, heavy vehicles will likely be the initial focus. China’s policy environment currently favors using fuel cells in commercial vehicles rather than passenger cars, Yuki Yu, founder of consultancy Energy Iceberg, told TechNode in April.
Commercial vehicles have the strongest case for hydrogen fuel cells over electric batteries. These vehicles have higher utilization rates than passenger cars, and can’t spend hours parked while charging.
Commercial vehicles are likely to see pressure to go green. China has ambitious goals to reach peak carbon emissions by 2030, and transportation could become a major focus for lawmakers. In the first half of 2020, trucks made up just 10% of all vehicles in China, but are some of the largest polluters on the road. “Heavy trucks account for one-third of China’s total road carbon emissions,” Refire’s Lin said during the Yangtze Delta Forum in April.
Refire has forged a series of high-profile partnerships to increase adoption of fuel cell technology.
In July 2019, Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp. signed a deal with Chinese commercial vehicle makers FAW and Higer bus, with Refire acting as a local supplier. As part of the deal, Refire ensured that the components of the fuel cell systems functioned together and was responsible for developing fuel-cell powertrains that China automakers could use in hydrogen buses, Reuters reported at the time.
Then, in April, the company partnered with German automotive supplier Schaeffler to “explore the key areas of fuel cell technology” and set up a knowledge base and shared resource platform. Other partners include oil and gas giant Sinopec, which has also invested in Refire.
In early March, Refire filed to list on Shanghai’s STAR Market, with plans to raise more than RMB 2 billion ($309 million).
The company’s valuation has increased significantly over the past few years following several rounds of fundraising. In 2019, motor manufacturer Broad-Ocean announced plans to acquire 20% of Refire for RMB 300 million, valuing the company at RMB 1.5 billion. Broad-Ocean later pulled out of the deal.
The company’s filing comes just months after competitor SinoHytec floated in Shanghai in August.
“Since SinoHytec went public, Refire has been raising funds at a quarterly pace, which shows that the capital market is enthusiastically seeking hydrogen energy companies that are close to IPO,” China-based hydrogen fuel cell research center The Orange Club wrote in a September report.
But Refire losses have expanded dramatically. Between 2017 and 2019, the company’s losses ballooned nearly sevenfold from RMB 35 million to RMB 278 million, narrowing to RMB 150 million in the first nine months of 2020, according to its prospectus
Refire’s losses were primarily driven by R&D costs, which was equivalent to 90% of the company’s operating income between January and September 2020.
While China’s government is laying down the groundwork to commercialize hydrogen ftechnology, there are significant hurdles to unlocking its potential and delivering Refire’s zero-emissions goals.
Unlike electric vehicles which have a vast network of charging stations, hydrogen cars are still in their infancy and refuelling stations will likely be hard to come by in the next few years.
Sinopec has made pledges to address this, and plans to build 1,000 hydrogen refueling stations that also sell conventional fuels by 2025. The company currently runs more than 30,000 gas stations across China.
Meanwhile, hydrogen fuel cells are only as clean as the process used to isolate the gas. Currently, more than 80% of hydrogen is produced using natural gas or coal, meaning that carbon is released during the isolation process. “Green hydrogen,” which is produced using energy from renewable sources, is currently very expensive, though an increasing number of projects are being launched.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
It’s another earnings episode, so the guys welcome Michael Norris back to the show. They discuss the quarterly earnings of Baidu, Tencent, and JD, while also answering questions from listeners. Key topics include what a new era in tech regulation means for stocks.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, James and Elliott are joined for the second time by Bloomberg tech reporter Zheping Huang. They discuss what the future has in store for ByteDance now that their founder Zhang Yiming is no longer in the CEO role. Zheping and his colleagues recently completed a six-part podcast series chronicling the rise of ByteDance’s Tiktok in the US, and the Trump administration’s attempts to ban it.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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“Achieving carbon neutrality may need trillions of yuan in investment and decades of continuous effort,” Zhang Lei, founder of Hillhouse Capital said during a speech in mid-March (in Chinese).
Zhang was speaking at the China Development Forum in Beijing, an event attended by high-level officials from China and abroad. It’s a pretty big deal, and the first major international conference that’s held after the conclusion of the Two Sessions, China’s biggest annual political meeting.
“…As a VC/PE organization, we have to be involved in something this big,” the investor and entrepreneur said, referring to China’s push to cut carbon emissions—a major theme at the event.
Hillhouse Capital, the venture firm Zhang founded in 2005, has invested in some of China’s biggest tech firms, including JD.com, Tencent, and Meituan. It’s the kind of investor most startups dream of attracting.
Chinese investment in carbon-reducing technologies is set to explode. Over the next 40 years, Goldman Sachs expects China to invest $16 trillion to reach the goal of carbon neutrality set by President Xi Jinping in September. So where is all this money going to come from?
Cleantech is TechNode’s monthly in-focus newsletter looking China’s push to clean up its environment using technology. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Typically, the Chinese government has been the largest driver of cleantech investment. For years, it has implemented massive subsidy systems for clean energy generation, including solar and wind, to drive adoption of these power sources.
As the government pushes carbon neutrality, venture capital firms are increasingly setting up cleantech-focused funds to back novel companies trying to solve the emissions puzzle.
It’s a common pattern—the state goes in first, and the market follows. It works, but at a cost, leading to wasteful investment as investors pile into the latest hot industry.
In the past, China’s government has put its own money behind promising low-carbon industries. The investments act as a seal of approval, leading to a flood of private funding.
In 2016, China’s investments in renewable energy and energy efficiency reached $167 billion. This accounted for 55% of its total spending on energy, higher than the global average of 33%, according to a report by researchers at the Energy Foundation China and the University of Maryland.
Last year, the country’s first public fund dedicated to investing in green projects and companies raised RMB 88.5 billion ($13.84 billion). In July, China’s finance and environment ministries set up the fund, which aims to support the transformation of the country’s economy and increase the role of the market in fighting emissions, though it has not yet formally launched.
The planned National Green Development Fund’s 26 mostly state investors include some of China’s biggest banks, companies, and several provincial governments. The fund is preparing to start business rapidly. It is setting up an investment management unit and plans on making a “sizable” number of hires as it prepares to launch later this year, AsianInvestor reported, citing sources close to the matter.
China’s banks have typically been major financiers of cleantech projects, specifically those involving energy generation, energy efficiency, and waste management.
One example is China Industrial Bank (CIB). According to a report by German environmental consultancy Adelphi, CIB was the first bank in China to “embrace sustainable development and green finance.” The company has focused on financing renewables, clean transportation, as well as water and wastewater management.
In 2017, the bank’s green financing portfolio reached more than RMB 674 billion.
Venture capital funds have taken note. Globally, cleantech startups raised a record $17 billion in venture capital funding in 2020, with the US and China making up the bulk of that total, according to a report by BloombergNEF.
“The majority of this investment was in late-stage startups from a variety of new climate-tech funds, resident clean-tech funds and corporate venture capitalists,” the report said.
The bulk of cleantech investments in China during 2020 were focused on the transportation sector, according to PwC. “One reason for the significant imbalance here is the Chinese automotive sector is relatively young, so much of the investment is made in entrepreneurial firms,” the company said in a recent report.
China’s method of funding has built the world’s largest electric vehicle and solar energy markets.
For just over two decades, large portions of the government’s cleantech funds were directed at the clean energy sector, driving down the price of solar panels globally and making China a world leader in panel production. Now, photovoltaic cells are seen more as a commodity than a technology.
The government made similar moves with electric vehicles, a cornerstone of the country’s low-carbon economy. China was late in producing gas-driven cars, putting it behind the US, Japan, and Germany. In 2009, China introduced subsidies for EVs in the hope that these vehicles could take the lead in the next generation of cars.
After spending RMB 60 billion in subsidies over ten years, China now has the largest EV market out of any country in the world.
But this method of investment comes at a cost: It can be inefficient and wasteful.
In the renewables sector, the state hasn’t always been able to keep up with the rate at which the market has expanded. The government has a backlog of missed subsidy payments. The deficit is huge—reaching RMB 328 billion at the end of 2020, according to Credit Suisse.
The problem stems from China’s tendency to promote and then regulate. The state relaxes regulation to encourage innovation, the market booms, and the officials impose regulation and pull back on support.
As a result of subsidies, China’s renewable energy capacity eclipses actual demand for the power that these sources produce. The government is now encouraging these firms to fend for themselves, as the cost of renewable energy reaches parity with fossil fuels in some areas in China.
In China’s EV sector, preferential treatment resulted in overinvestment and ill-spent funding. Government support for the sector triggered a rush into the industry. Investors threw money at entrepreneurs with little to no experience in the auto sector. They lost billions of yuan after the bubble burst.
At the height of the bubble, there were nearly 500 EV companies in China. Now, just a few survive, including Nio, Li Auto, Xpeng.
In September, China’s President Xi Jinping laid out plans to reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060.
The speech served as a call to arms, and venture capital firms and corporate VCs have already set up several multi-billion dollar cleantech-focused funds, pointing to the start of a possible rush into the sector.
These amounts are small compared to the government’s promised RMB 88.5 billion green fund, but represent a significant push from the private sector to heed to government’s calls to invest in the sector.
Zhang Lei’s Hillhouse Capital is also pushing into the cleantech industry. Earlier, this month, the company led a RMB 50 million funding round for carbon emissions management firm Carbonstop, in what could be the beginning of a new wave of founding rounds for cleantech startups in China.
Hillhouse has a significant number of cleantech companies in its portfolio. These firms include Longji Solar, solar power station operator Xinyi Energy, and battery maker CATL.
Another venture investor is Tsing Capital. The firm has backed a slew of startups that have become household names in cleantech, including drone maker eHang, China Hydro, and US-based Lucid Motors.
These government and private funds represent just a drop in the ocean when compared to what China is going to need to spend to meaningfully reduce its emissions. But given the amount of attention cleantech in China has received in the past few months, it’s likely just the beginning.
]]>Carbon emissions management startup Carbonstop has raised RMB 50 million ($7.77 million) in Series A funding, the company announced this week.
Why it matters: Carbonstop could be on the leading edge of a funding trend as Beijing pushes to go green.
READ MORE: Seven Chinese cleantech companies you should know about
Details: Carbonstop’s RMB 50 million Series A was led by Hillhouse Capital and Matrix Partners China.
]]>“Enterprise-side carbon neutrality, which got little attention 10 years ago, is becoming a requirement. I believe consumption-side carbon neutrality will follow this trend in the next 10 years.”
Yan Luhui, founder of Carbonstop, in a statement May 10
China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, James and Elliott are joined by Stewart Randall, Director of Operations at Intralink Shanghai and a regular TechNode contributor. Stew talks about the current semiconductor frenzy in China, what are the factors fueling it, and how investors can differentiate the contenders from the pretenders.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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Editor’s note: The ‘Techlash Tracker’ stopped updating from November as tech crackdowns became recurring in China. The topic is now part of TechNode’s daily news coverage.
Starting this week, TechNode is launching a new open resource. The “Techlash Tracker” is a database of major regulatory moves involving big tech in China, an open-source project to help make sense of a major trend defining China tech this year.
The tracker is a regularly and openly available updated set of spreadsheets, built in Airtable, recording events. Click here to view.
We invite anyone interested in China tech to use this resource for analysis, and to contribute to it.
In China tech, the word of the year is “antitrust.” Alibaba was fined a record-breaking $2.8 billion for “forced exclusivity” and other anti-competitive practices, while Meituan faces a probe by market regulators over the same practices. Tencent, Didi, and Baidu—to name only a few—have been fined lesser amounts for failing to submit M&A deals for review.
Or is it “de-risking”? The IPO of fintech pioneer Ant Group, slated to be the world’s largest, was abruptly axed late last year as regulators prepared a series of changes to its operations. JD Digits, a competitor, withdrew its IPO application voluntarily in the wake of the fiasco. This week, 11 other tech majors were summoned to Beijing to discuss changes to their fintech operations.
Some say it’s all about data. Beijing has moved in the past year to recognize the strategic importance of this resource, which it has called ”the new oil,” and hopes to prevent tech companies using walled gardens to monopolize access to it.
Related to data, the list continues: consumer rights, privacy, cybersecurity.
We can see the trend: Big tech is being regulated as never before. At TechNode, we’re seeing a big trend, and we’ve been wondering how to understand it—and what to call it.
It’s tempting to see it as the local vector of a so-called global “techlash” that embraces everything from the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) to US Senator Elizabeth Warren.
Or maybe it’s just “Jacklash”: both Alibaba and Ant were founded by Jack Ma, a flamboyant billionaire who annoyed regulators when he dismissed banking authorities as “old men” in a speech last year, and some commentators have interpreted many recent moves as personal attacks on him. But then, how to explain the broadening scope of the investigations?
When we don’t know where to start with a topic, we often approach it by just making a list. In our new “Techlash Tracker,” we aim to make a database of key events in big tech regulation. We plan to include enforcement actions, fines, and announcements of new laws and regulations. We will track private antitrust lawsuits in another sheet.
We’ve chosen an intentionally vague name, “techlash,” rather than “antitrust” or “crackdown,” to indicate uncertainty about an interpretation.
The tracker is intended as a living document: we aim to update the list at least once a week with new events, if applicable. We’ll also continue to dig through our archives to add more previous events, and plan to create some visualizations to help understand the material as the list grows.
The material here is also a bit raw. Expect to see it in more digestible forms in our reporting in the coming months as well as, we hope, in the work of our friends and colleagues.
The Techlash Tracker is an open resource. In addition to making it free to use, we invite other analysts to use the data we’ve collected (but please do credit us if so). We’re also counting on our readers to help us catch events. Click here to submit more events for the tracker if you see something we’ve missed.
Thanks for your support, and we hope you’ll find the tracker useful!
Your techno-friends,
The TechNode team
]]>Hello Inc., the bike rental startup behind China’s ubiquitous blue HelloBikes, has submitted a prospectus to the US Securities and Exchange Commission in preparation for a Nasdaq IPO. This is a rare look into the economics of the bike-sharing industry, as it’s the first time a company in the sector has released extensive financial data.
Why it matters: Hello’s filing is a sign that the once-volatile bike rental industry is moving beyond its growth phase.
READ MORE: The bike rental boom is dead. Long live bike rental
Details: The numbers in the filing reveal that Hello still has a ways to go to reach maturity.
On track for profits? Industry experts weigh in.
“HelloBike was a latecomer to the bike-sharing money wars. Its come-from-behind two-wheel leadership, as well as its growing carpool share, suggest the company is the beneficiary of savvy strategists and operators.”
—Michael Norris
Context: At its peak, 80 companies around China operated in the bike rental industry. But the sector soon became bloated and dozens of these firms went under.
Cleantech is a big field. Mention it to someone and it’s likely to elicit images of fields of solar panels or forests of wind turbines.
But it’s a lot more than that. It encompasses technologies that reduce our negative impact on the environment by improving energy efficiency and using resources in a more sustainable way.
We’ve found a lot of activity in this area. Lots of startups are doing their part to mitigate the effects of pollution on the environment—and cashing in on the broad drive to reduce emissions.
We wanted to give you a sense of the range of the field, so for the past few weeks, we’ve been tracking down Chinese companies that we think are interesting and that have been able to make a business out of providing technologies that cut pollution.
Cleantech is TechNode’s monthly in-focus newsletter looking China’s push to clean up its environment using technology. Available to TechNode Squared members.
What we’ve come up with is an interesting mix of firms, from those that provide software to others that produce the backbone of clean energy production.
Area: Solar panels
Funding: Early stage
Location: Shanghai
Founded by solar energy pioneer Shi Zhengrong, Sunman produces lightweight, flexible solar panels that the company says are “70% lighter and up to 95% thinner” than traditional solar panels.
Shi, Sunman’s founder, also started Suntech Power, one of the world’s largest producers of solar panels. He left the solar giant after the company faced financial trouble and he was bought out in 2013. Shi then went on to found Sunman in 2015.
In November last year, the company received $7 million in funding from the Australian government-owned Clean Energy Finance Corporation as part of its $12 million Series B. SoftBank China, Southern Cross Venture Partners, and Shi also participated in the round.
READ MORE: China’s big tech vows big carbon cuts with little detail
Area: Carbon accounting software
Funding: Early stage
Location: Beijing
Carbonstop provides software that helps enterprises cut emissions. The cleantech company’s main product functions as an accounting platform for carbon emissions, allowing customers to analyze and evaluate their emissions data.
Yan Luhui, also a member of the UK-based non-profit Carbon Disclosure Project, founded Carbonstop in 2011. He previously worked at environmental consultancy Best Foot Forward.
Area: EV batteries
Funding: Publicly traded
Location: Shenzhen
Founded in 1995 and listed in Shenzhen, BYD is one of China’s biggest electric vehicle (EV) makers. As a result of the COVID-19-induced downturn, the Warren Buffet-backed company saw its deliveries drop to 179,000 vehicles in 2020, down 18% compared to 2019.
Area: EV batteries
Funding: Publicly traded
Location: Ningde, Fujian
CATL controls more than a third of the global EV battery market. The company produced 4.3 gigawatt hours of batteries last year, up 166% year on year, according to SNE Research.
Over the past 10 years, China has built the world’s largest EV market. And the market is projected to rapidly expand. Chinese consumers are expected to buy 1.9 million of these vehicles this year, up nearly 50% from the 1.3 million sold last year, according to figures from market research firm Canalys.
Area: Wind turbine inspections
Funding: Early stage
Location: Shanghai
Clobotics is looking to take advantage of China’s massive renewable energy boom by automating wind turbine inspections, which take up to six hours when inspected manually. The sector is an area of growing interest for startups around the country.
China’s wind power industry has expanded dramatically. The country installed more than 70 gigawatts of capacity in 2020 alone, nearly double its previous record. Just 1 gigawatt is the equivalent of more than 400 wind turbines, according to estimates from the US’ Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy.
Area: Smart grid management software
Funding: Early stage
Location: Shanghai
EQuota Energy’s platform collects data and uses it for preventive maintenance and to optimize building energy usage.
As cleantech becomes the norm and machines in the energy generation process are increasingly connected to the cloud, companies like EQuota Energy will benefit. EQuota’s smart energy management platform creates efficiency gains along the energy distribution process using artificial intelligence.
Area: Waste management robots
Funding: Early stage
Location: Kunshan, Jiangsu
Alpheus is an AIoT (artificial intelligence + Internet of Things) startup with a range of waste collection appliances that have been deployed in multiple Chinese cities. The cleantech company provides AI-powered trash cans that can automatically sort waste for recycling.
Recycling trash has been well-handled by informal collectors, who pick up and sort waste manually. But other forms of waste have been a pain for municipal authorities. That said, machines haven’t been able to match humans in terms of waste-sorting efficiency.
As the government prioritizes cutting solid waste, solutions set to replace analog counterparts include smart public toilets, smart trash cans, and trash-sorting robots.
Funding will be key to the success of these startups. They stand to benefit immensely from the cleantech boom—a market that is expected to reach $16 trillion in the next 40 years. So where is this funding coming from? That’s what we’ll explore next time.
]]>A little over a decade ago, China’s leaders laid out plans to become the world’s biggest market for electric vehicles (EVs). The country was late in producing gas-driven cars, putting it behind the US, Japan, and Germany. In 2009, China introduced subsidies for EVs in the hope that these vehicles could take the lead in the next generation of cars. Now, observers ask if hydrogen is next.
China’s EV push worked—the country is now the world’s largest market for EVs and is home to some of the world’s largest manufacturers of EVs and EV batteries.
Now, the government and some of China’s biggest energy companies are jumping into hydrogen energy. More than 10 state-owned energy companies including Sinopec and State Grid have plans to increase the use of hydrogen energy in the country.
While China has a well-developed EV industry, the country is looking for new ways to cut emissions. The government doesn’t want to “put all its eggs in one basket with battery EVs,” Tu Le, managing director of Beijing-based consultancy Sino Auto Insights, told TechNode.
In September, Chinese President Xi Jinjing revealed plans for China to reach peak emissions by 2030 and hit carbon neutrality by 2060. Hydrogen fuel, which can be used in applications from industrial processes to transportation, could form a linchpin in reaching this goal. The technology could allow China to move away from fossil fuels as the cost of producing clean hydrogen drops.
“Hydrogen is now expected to play a much more important role to drastically decrease [China]’s greenhouse gas emissions over time,” Tu Jianjun, adjunct professor at the School of Environment at Beijing Normal University, wrote in a paper late last year.
Bottom line: China’s hydrogen energy sector could see massive growth in the next 30 years. The country’s commercial vehicle sector is likely to see the biggest benefit from the technology.
What is hydrogen power? Hydrogen fuels cells are a dense, efficient, and clean form of energy storage. Use power to isolate the gas, and then you can deploy it to power a car in a reaction that’s cleaner than fossil fuels and requires less heavy equipment than battery electrics. It even has applications in energy-intensive industries like the steel sector. One of the most popular prospects at the moment is fuel cell electric vehicles (FCEV).
The element is rarely found in its pure form and needs to be extracted from water, coal, or natural gas. But producing it in an environmentally friendly way is currently expensive, preventing wider use until the issue is dealt with.
China eyes hydrogen: After being delayed last year, a national plan for hydrogen is expected at some point in 2021. Already, several whitepapers and planning documents have laid out goals to decrease emissions and increase hydrogen energy adoption. Until recently, China’s interest in developing its hydrogen economy was not driven by an ambition to cut emissions.
Localized developments: Despite the lack of a national plan, Beijing has encouraged local governments to develop and fund their own hydrogen industries. But these plans are often far more optimistic in their targets than industry expectations, Yuki Yu, founder of Energy Iceberg, wrote in a report.
“Anytime the Chinese government puts the thumb on the scale, there’s going to be 200 or 300 companies globally that come with their hand out.”
Tu Le, managing director of Sino Auto Insights
Better than batteries? But China has bet big on competing technology. The country spent billions building its electric vehicle industry. Government subsidies led to the rise of some of the biggest EV companies in the world, and made China the world’s number one market for these types of vehicles.
A brief timeline: China’s drive to use hydrogen for power has been years in the making. The country’s ambitions were initially set out as part of its Made in China 2025 plan. There has been a lot of action in the industry over the past few years, and things appear to be picking up pace.
What’s the potential? In China, buses and trucks will likely come first. The policy environment currently favors using fuel cells in heavier, commercial vehicles rather than passenger cars, Energy Iceberg’s Yu said.
Dirty secrets: Hydrogen is only as clean as the process used to produce it. The element is rarely found in its pure form, and typically needs to be extracted from fossil fuels or water. Depending on how it is produced, it can be completely clean or release harmful gases.
Cleanup in aisle H: The industry needs a cleanup to achieve its green potential.
“More than 80% of hydrogen produced in China is grey. But we see a growing number of green hydrogen projects being launched. In 2018, there were probably just one or two projects, but last year, at least 30 were announced.”
Yuki Yu, founder of Energy Iceberg
What next? China has a history of rapidly developing domestic industries after choosing them key development priorities. The country’s EV and solar industries are a testament of this. Hydrogen energy is likely to be next. Development—and funding—will likely accelerate once a national plan is rolled out.
READ MORE: Little mention of China’s EV industry in Five-Year Plan bodes well: experts
Big opportunities: Hydrogen has big potential, but it will take big investments to bring the technology to widespread use. Oliver Bishop, general manager of hydrogen at petroleum giant Shell, told Green Tech Media that China is expected to play an important role in the global hydrogen economy, with large scale deployments meaning cheaper costs around the world.
China’s leadership in the hydrogen economy hinges on whether it can clean up its hydrogen production processes—and convince the world that electric vehicles are not the only way.
“There needs to be private enterprise appetite to diversify out of battery electrics, which are already doing research into batteries and infrastructure,” Tu said.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, James and Elliott are joined by Protocol’s Zeyi Yang. Zeyi shares his thoughts on Zhihu, the popular Chinese information-sharing platform that recently IPOed in New York. The guys discuss the company’s strengths and weaknesses, and how investors view the company’s potential.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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Guest:
Editor:
Podcast information:
China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, James and Elliott are joined by frequent CTI guest Michael Norris to cover the 2020 Q4 earnings of Pinduoduo, Kuaishou, and Meituan. The guys also answer some questions posed by listeners of the show on Twitter.
Sorry folks, we had a little trouble with our recording setup and there’s some interference in the audio.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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Revenue growth for Chinese telecommunications equipment maker Huawei fell dramatically in 2020 as overseas sales shrank in the wake of US sanctions and disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, the company reported on Wednesday.
Why it matters: The decline comes as Huawei’s revenues shrank in all markets but China. Huawei was placed on a US trade blacklist in 2019, blocking the company from sourcing US-made components without permission.
Details: Huawei’s revenue reached RMB 891.4 billion in 2020, up 3.8% year on year, but down from an annual growth rate of 19.1% in 2019.
This article has been corrected to reflect that Huawei’s consumer business revenue growth fell, not its revenue as previously stated.
]]>As China’s government lays out goals to hit carbon neutrality by 2060, Chinese tech companies are pledging to follow Beijing’s lead by drastically reducing their own emissions.
In the leadup to and aftermath of the annual meeting of China’s national legislature in early March, China’s biggest companies have been making big promises. Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group has vowed to hit carbon net zero by 2030. JD Logistics has pledged to go completely renewable by the same year. Tencent has announced that it has a plan for eventual carbon neutrality, without a timeline. None have laid out exactly how they’ll reach their goals.
Wind and solar energy sources have reached parity with coal in parts of the country, but China’s companies have so far been slow to increase the share of electricity they get from renewable sources. Tech firms’ growth in carbon emission is eclipsing their growth of renewable energy use.
Search giant Baidu’s total carbon emissions increased 53% year-on-year to reach 499 million tons in 2019, according to the company’s report on low carbon development. At the same time, the proportion of electricity it sourced from renewables hit 8.6% in 2019, up 38% during the same period.
Cleantech is TechNode’s monthly in-focus newsletter looking China’s push to clean up its environment using technology. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Similarly, social media and gaming firm Tencent’s carbon emissions from its offices and data centers increased to 857 million tons in 2019, up 20% on the year, according to the company’s 2019 annual report. It did not disclose what percentage of electricity it sources from renewables.
Previous top-down initiatives, including the government’s poverty alleviation initiative, have led to new opportunities for the country’s tech firms. Opportunities mean money, but cutting emissions means scaling back or potentially costly new investments.
Since September, when Chinese President Xi Jinping announced that China would reach carbon neutrality by 2060, several companies have laid out plans to control their emissions. These press releases typically lack detail on how the companies will reach their carbon goals.
Net zero doesn’t mean that companies won’t produce carbon but they’ll offset their emissions by investing in carbon capture technologies or by planting trees, among others.
In a November press release, e-commerce giant JD said its delivery arm JD Logistics would reduce its carbon emissions by half of its 2019 levels in 2030, and only use renewable energy sources from the same year. JD Logistics is one of six branches of JD’s empire, and has filed for a Hong Kong IPO. The unit is the largest polluter of all JD companies, according to a company spokesperson..
JD.com, the JD brand’s flagship e-commerce platform, has yet to outline a plan to cut emissions.
We’ve heard nothing about how e-commerce marketplaces plan to tackle carbon neutrality. That’s likely because the task is particularly difficult for these companies. They’d have to decide whether to make emissions standards for the millions of merchants who use their platforms.
On Jan. 12, Tencent, the company behind popular messaging app WeChat, unveiled its own plan to reach net zero emissions in a 2,500 character WeChat post. The document, which focused primarily on reducing emissions from its buildings and data centers, detailed methods it could use to do this, including reusing heat generated by its data centers and using novel liquid technology to lighten its electricity usage. The company placed heavy emphasis on using AI to cut emissions, but did not set a timeline to reach carbon net zero.
“In the future, I expect the biggest part will be powering data centers with clean energy. It will be difficult, but we will work hard at it,” Pony Ma, CEO of Tencent, said in a WeChat post commenting on Tencent’s plan and shared by Chinese media.
Alibaba-affiliate Ant Group, the world’s largest fintech company, has been the most explicit and ambitious. It plans to hit carbon net zero by 2030, according to a press release dated March 12. The company said it had created a roadmap to eliminate emissions from its electricity usage this year, and that it would completely cut emissions from its supply chain, which includes data centers and infrastructure, by 2030.
Alibaba also hasn’t released a plan aimed at cutting emissions, but ranked highest in a recent Greenpeace study focused on renewable energy use among Chinese tech companies.
Baidu detailed its work on lowering its carbon emissions in its report on low carbon development, which came as a response to Beijing’s latest carbon goals. It also laid out the ways it is greening its data centers, but has not made public any emissions targets. At this year’s Two Sessions in Beijing, CEO Robin Li made a number of proposals for cutting emissions in transportation, including policies to promote rolling out autonomous vehicles, and increasing the efficiency of transportation systems using AI, big data, and 5G.
Key to these plans will be how companies deal with data centers. Explosive energy use from these facilities are not a uniquely Chinese problem. Tech giants from the US have also been working on making their storage and computing facilities more efficient and eco-friendly.
For tech companies, data is money, and the billions of WeChat messages, emails, photos, and videos uploaded by internet users everyday need to be stored somewhere. But more storage means more pollution.
In 2018, data centers in China used 161 terawatt-hours (TWh) of electricity, according to 2019 research by Greenpeace and the North China Electric Power University. That’s enough to power a mid-sized nation, and is four times higher than New Zealand’s total energy consumption in 2018.
During the same year, around 73% of all the electricity data centers in China used was generated by coal and bought from the grid, according to Greenpeace’s report.
Total energy demand from data centers is expected to reach 267 TWh by 2023, around 4% of China’s total energy consumption in 2019. Should China’s energy mix not change, its tech industry will be responsible for generating 163 million tons of carbon dioxide, more than that generated by the entire population of Venezuela.
Data centers in China have seen some improvements, with the efficiency of tech companies’ data centers rivalling their international counterparts. “While China’s data center industry has made significant improvements in terms of energy efficiency, the industry’s massive carbon footprint is proof that much more action is needed to increase reliance on clean energy sources,” said Greenpeace East Asia climate and energy campaigner Ye Ruiqi.
As these companies push for growth, they’ll undoubtedly need more data centers to process and store information from their users. Last year, Alibaba said it would invest $28 billion in data centers over the following three years. Similarly, Tencent announced plans to pile $70 billion into new infrastructure, which includes data centers, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence.
Increasingly, Chinese companies like Alibaba and Tencent have begun locating new data centres in areas that are rich in renewable energy, including northern China’s Hebei and Inner Mongolia, as well as Guizhou and Sichuan provinces in the country’s southwest.
Nevertheless, officials in some provinces are becoming increasingly cautious of power-hungry data centers. Beijing, Shanghai, and Guizhou have mandated that new data centers meet efficiency benchmarks. Meanwhile, Inner Mongolia last month proposed controlling the growth of new data centers in the region after it was censured by Beijing for failing to meet energy consumption control targets.
Aside from energy usage, some of China’s biggest e-commerce firms are responsible for producing mountains of waste. As firms like Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo see record-breaking sales figures, their plastic waste footprint increases.
During last year’s Singles Day shopping festival, which ran from Nov. 1 to 11, China’s postal and express services delivered nearly 4 billion packages, according to the country’s postal regulator. There are no official figures on how much waste was produced during this time, but one estimate shows the 1.88 billion parcels delivered during the 2019 festival period produced 250,000 tons of garbage. Around 20% of that total can’t be reused, though far more goes unrecycled because of the costs.
E-commerce platforms have attempted to deal with the issue. Last year, Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao said it had introduced biodegradable packing and cut down on tape usage. It also said it cut down on paper used for shipping labels.
While China’s tech companies have shown increased interest in reducing their carbon emissions, there is still a long way to go.
In a separate report from Greenpeace and North China Electric Power University at the beginning of 2020, researchers said China’s tech companies need to “dramatically scale up their procurement of clean energy.”
“Internet companies and data center operators should set targets for 100% renewable energy use,” the researchers wrote.
To do this, companies can build or invest in renewable energy, an option used by data centers around the country by installing solar panels in their roofs. Additionally, companies can purchase renewable energy for provincial generators or buy green power certificates.
“Buying green power certificates allows companies to claim environmental benefits associated with renewable energy generation, even if electricity from a renewable power plant does not feed directly into a data center facility,” Greenpeace said.
But the Chinese government is taking renewables more seriously, and that could spur tech companies to action. These companies often respond to policy priorities—for example, tech giants including Alibaba, Pinduoduo, and JD took Beijing’s drive to alleviate poverty seriously by narrowing in on China’s rural communities. Developing new markets in China’s hinterland was lucrative for the country’s tech firms, powering much growth seen in the past few years.
Could greening tech play out the same way? It’s not clear. The plans we’ve seen so far are promises to cut back, or install costly new systems, not develop new markets. Lasting change may rely more on companies who figure out how to get rich by going clean—and that’s the topic we’ll look at next month.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
Recorded live on Clubhouse, Elliott chats with University of Hong Kong professor Angela Zhang about her new book “Chinese Antitrust Exceptionalism.” They explore the unique structural and cultural frameworks that distinguish China’s antitrust approach from that of other prominent nations, how China may use antitrust in its competition with the US, and what investors can learn from Ant Group’s halted IPO.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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Chinese regulators have given more than 130 apps including those developed by dronemaker DJI, social media and gaming giant Tencent, and artificial intelligence firm iFlyTek until Wednesday to fix privacy violations that include overcollecting users’ personal information.
Why it matters: China has increased scrutiny on how private companies handle the data of its nearly 1 billion internet users.
READ MORE: The loophole in China’s privacy regime: anonymization
Details: China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) said on Friday the companies had overcollected personal information and misled users into downloading their software.
As China’s legislature prepares to meet tomorrow, we’re bringing you a special edition of our Insights column: a preview of tech in the 14th Five-Year Plan. We’ve looked through the last plan, and the documents describing priorities for the new one, to give you our baseline expectations for key tech areas in the new plan.
Greetings from Beijing, where the weather is just turning to spring, the air this week feels like taking a bath in an ashtray, and, across town, about 3,000 people are getting together Friday to kick off the annual meeting of China’s national legislature.
This is one of the big meetings: This year, the National People’s Congress will approve China’s 14th Five-Year Plan, which will set out the government’s economic priorities for the next half-decade. The meeting lasts from March 5 to March 11, and in previous years the plan has come toward the end of the session.
Technology and innovation are sure to play a leading role. “Innovation-driven development” was one of the first topics addressed in the 13th Five-Year Plan, issued in 2016, and the phrase is equally prominent in previews of the new plan.
What is (likely) new is emphasis on another key phrase: “self-sufficiency.” As the US has used its control of key technologies as a weapon, China’s efforts to produce its own have a new urgency.
For people with tech projects, the start of a new plan period means opportunity. The “money spigot” for homegrown tech and innovation is likely to get even more generous, said Uny Cao, vice president at the Zhejiang University Intellectual Property Exchange Center and friend of TechNode.
What are we looking for when the new plan is published next week? What’s likely to get the most attention—and which will get less? Below, you’ll find TechNode’s roundup of key mentions of technologies we expect to see highlighted in the 14th Five-Year Plan.
Macro focus: Above all, five-year economic plans are strategic documents. The most important decisions will be macro goals for the economy as a whole: whether to set a GDP target and how high; how to pace the economy’s transition to meet a 2060 carbon neutrality goal; and how to balance such factors as imports, exports, investment, and consumption. We’re not going to cover all those issues below: You’ll find lots of sharper macro commentary from our friends and colleagues at other outlets.
Don’t expect details: A five-year plan gives you a 10,000-foot view of the government’s priorities, reflecting agreement on goals but probably not how to reach them. If you’re interested in a topic, look for more specialized plans issued by ministries and provinces for implementation.
Compare, compare, compare: Most important political documents don’t make much sense in isolation. To identify key decisions, policy analysts compare successive versions of the same plan to see what’s changed—additions, subtractions, or even changes in the order of topics may indicate shifting priorities. We’ve looked at the 13th Five-Year Plan (full text in English), which ended in 2020, to set a baseline for key technology issues.
Decisions, not surprises: You probably have already heard of most topics to be covered by the Five-Year Plan. Stakeholders across the Chinese political system have been advocating, piloting, and negotiating ideas for years in the hopes of influencing this plan. Much like a major plan in any political system, it bears the fingerprints of hundreds or thousands of political actors of all kinds.
Basis for our expectations: Last October, the Party’s Central Committee met in Beijing to discuss the upcoming five-year plan in a meeting called the Fifth Plenum. The most relevant of the reports that meeting produced was the Central Committee’s “Suggestions” or “Guidelines” for the 14th Five-Year Plan. Although much shorter—around three pages compared to three hundred—the structure of this document usually parallels that of the published five-year plan. We heavily relied on it to make the predictions below.
A new approach to data management will reverberate across tech industries. The next stage of China’s tech policy will shift from an emphasis on developing cybersecurity and big data, to building up the data economy.
Mentions in the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last five-year development plan focused on building up cybersecurity and control over data. But it also set goals to get government offices to share data with each other and industry.
READ MORE: Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law
Expectations in the 14th Five-Year Plan: In the Fifth Plenum guidelines, data has joined an impressive new crowd: “[We will] advance the marketization and reform of the economic factors of land, labor, capital, technology, and data.” When a Communist Party puts you on the same level as labor and capital, you know you’ve made it big.
The Fifth Plenum guidelines call for the development of a rules-based data economy. Or as they put it: Establish basic systems and standards for data property rights, transactions and circulation, cross-border transmission, and security protection to promote the development and utilization of data resources.
“Ensuring the fluid circulation of data is now an economic imperative,” said Kendra Schaefer, head of tech policy research at Beijing-based strategic advisory firm Trivium. “In practical terms, that means that the overarching theme of China’s data policy over the next five years will focus on allowing data to be shared, transferred, bought, sold, and utilized,” Schaefer said. The plenum’s recommendations called for “systems and standards” in data property rights, market mechanisms for data, as well as cross-border data transfers.
So what? “The 14th Five-Year Plan will mark the beginning of a new era in China’s approach to data policy,” Schaefer said. China is stepping up from the securitization of data resources to developing a system in which data can be exploited as a resource. In the upcoming plan period, we can expect more support for trade in data alongside a continued crackdown on bad cybersecurity practices and insufficient privacy protections.
One of the biggest components of the 14th five-year plan deals with action to combat the environmental damage that followed years of rapid industrialization and economic growth. In the wake of a vow to set China on a path to carbon neutrality by 2060, economic planners will be under pressure to come up with big changes. China’s tech sector stands to benefit: To reach the country’s emissions goals, investment in clean technology could reach $16 trillion in the next 40 years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 2016 plan laid out targets to reduce carbon emissions by cutting the country’s carbon intensity—the amount of carbon dioxide produced for every unit of GDP. Through subsidies, state planners pushed prices in the solar industry so low that it effectively went from being a high-tech sector to a commodity business.
Expectations: The new plan will likely clarify how China will reach peak carbon emissions by 2030 and carbon net zero by 2060, goals laid out to the UN General Assembly by President Xi Jinping in September.
So what? The world is waiting to see how China plans to reach its emissions targets by 2060. We expect the plan to create more targets and pressure on local governments to improve carbon emissions, but details on how these will be implemented—and how cleantech investment will be affected—will likely be spelled out in lower-level plans.
A pillar of China’s economic growth, the automotive sector has long been dominated by well-established foreign brands, which hold more than 60% of the market share, while domestic automakers are concentrated in the low-end segment. But that is changing as China’s strength in electric vehicles is boosting its position on the global industry value chain, thanks to strong policy support over the past five years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: When China’s cabinet in 2010 initiated a development plan (in Chinese) for seven strategic emerging industries, new energy vehicles (NEVs) was one of them. In 2016, Beijing set an ambitious target of 5 million sales of NEVs in the coming five years, a number which would mark the beginning of mass adoption. This initiative became part of Beijing’s larger goal of becoming the world’s next innovation powerhouse.
Expectations: NEVs were briefly mentioned as one of the strategic emerging industries in the fifth plenum guidelines, but with no detail about the growth outlook.
So what? China’s electric vehicle market staged a strong rebound after disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic last year and has remained the world’s biggest market since 2014. However, there have been bumps on the road, including electric car fires and the ongoing auto chip shortages.
China also lags the US in the vehicle autonomy competition, raising calls for more effort put toward core technology advancement. Pledging for quality growth amid rising superpower tensions in the next five years, Beijing would have to stay the course in boosting the sector, while realizing little near-term profit.
Chinese leaders have long vowed to achieve “self-reliance” in strategic technologies, and semiconductors are one of the priorities. The sector is expected to get major attention as China issues its development blueprint for the next five years.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The five-year plan ending in 2020 saw semiconductors, along with other high-tech sectors like robotics, smart transportation, and virtual reality, as “new areas of growth” for the nation’s economy, but didn’t make production of semiconductors a strategic priority.
Expectations: In 2015, China set a goal to make 70% of the chips it uses by 2025 as part of its “Made in China 2025” initiative. Now the question is how China will achieve that goal. The country only produced 6% of the semiconductors it consumed in 2020.
E-commerce falls under the broader concept of the digital economy, a major theme in the plan that also covers 5G, artificial intelligence, and big data. E-commerce is expected to play a greater role in driving China’s economic growth in the next plan period.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The development plan that ended in 2020 set out to expand the e-commerce sector by facilitating its deep integration with traditional industries and prioritizing its governance. China sought to integrate e-commerce into various areas including education, healthcare, culture, and tourism to drive innovation.
Expectations: China expects online commerce to continue supporting its macro strategies, notably poverty alleviation and the One Belt One Road initiative. E-commerce has become an important means for China’s rural dwellers to sell their agricultural products. With more free trade zones on the horizon, China looks to expand its cross-border e-commerce market in the next five years.
Blockchain could be a new item in the 14th plan. It’s had plenty of attention at top levels in the past year.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Zilch. Blockchain was not on top policymakers’ agenda back in 2016.
Push from the top: The technology had its breakout moment in Chinese policy in October 2019, when President Xi Jinping praised the technology at a Politburo study session.
No crypto: Chinese regulators are not big fans of one of the technology’s most popular applications: cryptocurrencies. The past year’s clampdown on unregulated cryptocurrencies “is meant to clear a path to regulated forms of digital assets, starting first with DCEP [the central bank’s R&D project that includes the digital RMB],” said Michael Sung, co-director of the Fintech Research Center at the Fanhai International School of Finance at Fudan University, told TechNode.
Expectations: The technology was not mentioned in the 14th plan guidelines issued after the Fifth Plenum.
So what? China is already very interested in blockchain, but has not given the technology the same level of support as, say, electric vehicles. A name-check in the 14th plan would seal its status as a key technology and could pave the way for a national blockchain roadmap.
China has recently tightened antitrust regulations on tech companies. Regulators started at the end of last year to look at tech giants’ market dominance and to use anti-monopoly tools to limit them. The country also changed antitrust laws and rules to better rein in big tech. As top leaders of China repeatedly vow to “strengthen anti-monopoly” and “rein in disorderly capital expansion,” what has affected tech companies so far seems to be just the start of severer crackdowns.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The 13th development plan mentioned breaking industry monopolies and rooting out market barriers. It also intended to establish an “efficient antitrust law enforcement system,” deepen international antitrust law enforcement cooperation, and check administrative monopolies.
Expectations: China is already on the move to rein in big tech with anti-monopoly tools. If the new plan pushes government agencies to impose stricter antitrust regulations and break monopolies, tech giants like Tencent, Alibaba, and Bytedance may feel a lot more pain.
Agriculture, the foundation for feeding China’s 1.4 billion population, is facing a new round of restructuring and modernization. The countryside is a growing focus for tech companies because it is home to a group of maturing consumers as well as being a lower-cost manufacturing hub. That makes aligning with rural developments a big goal for these internet firms.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: The last plan placed a high priority on continuous modernization of rural areas and the agricultural sector. The plan promoted integration of agriculture and e-commerce and encouraged the application of big data and internet of things tech in agriculture.
Expectations: China is expected to continue to focus on improving the quality, safety, and profitability of the sector, goals that require technological assistance.
Policymakers are counting on tech in a plan to improve both farmers’ output and their incomes, said Even Pay, an associate director at Trivium:
“Policymakers are preparing for a future where there are fewer farmers. Some of them may be older, and in need of equipment to make their jobs easier. They also hope to attract some young people back into farming by making the work easier and more interesting—like operating ag machinery or flying drones.”
“Another big reason the government is supporting agtech is the “dual circulation strategy”—which looks to make domestic consumption the main driver of China’s macroeconomic growth. Right now China’s rural areas have the greatest growth potential of anywhere in the country—provided farmers’ incomes go up.”
Fintech and the digital yuan might get a direct mention in the 14th plan.
In the 13th Five-Year Plan: Fintech was directly mentioned only once in the last plan. That plan called for a risk monitoring and crisis management system for all financial activity, including “internet finance.”
Fintech development: Since the release of the 2016-2020 plan, the use of fintech has skyrocketed, and an overwhelming majority of Chinese citizens now make use of some sort of digital finance, whether that’s for lending, investment, or insurance.
Digital yuan: China’s central bank has been working on a digital form of cash, the digital yuan, since 2014. If implemented, it will be the first state-backed digital currency by a major economy. The central bank appears to have accelerated the development of the currency in 2019 after Facebook announced its Libra project. Trials for the e-CNY started in late 2020 in four Chinese cities: Chengdu, Shenzhen, Suzhou, and Xiong’an.
Expectations: The guidelines directly called for the improvement of “the level of financial technology.” They also included language similar to the previous plan’s regarding inclusive and green finance, as well as on financial risk prevention and monitoring.
So what? China’s fintech industry will continue to grow, especially given a lift in the 14th plan. But incumbents will face more competition as a result of antitrust regulations and the opening up of payments systems that DCEP will bring. Tech companies dabbling in finance will also be increasingly brought under the fold of financial regulation.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, James and Elliott are joined by TechNode’s own Eliza Gkritsi. Eliza gives an update on how Ant Group’s fate may change as a result of new regulations. She also gives her takeaways at this current point of China’s digital currency rollout. The conversation also touches on China’s crypto-mining industry, and the rig-makers who have been benefiting from Bitcoin’s latest bull run.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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China is the world’s biggest polluter. Rivers around some of the country’s largest cities have become unfit for human use. Urban areas produce mountains of waste. And—most important to the rest of the world—China’s carbon emissions have increased fourfold in three decades.
Rapid industrialization and urbanization turned the country’s skies gray. As cities expanded, landfills have filled up ahead of schedule. With the rise of e-commerce and ubiquitous food delivery, the World Bank expects China to produce twice as much municipal waste as the US by 2030, just 25 years after it became the world’s largest producer of refuse.
Meanwhile, between 2010 and 2018, the number of pollution sources in China rose by half, according to China’s environmental ministry, increasing from 5.9 million to 9 million in less than a decade. These include polluters of air, water, and soil. Of that total, 7.4 million are industrial sources.
Now, Beijing is taking forceful action. In September, Chinese President Xi Jinping surprised the world by announcing that China would dramatically reduce its carbon footprint in the next 40 years, effectively cutting net emissions to zero. The commitment follows years of tightening policies aimed at reducing carbon intensity.
Xi did not give any details on immediate targets, which are expected to be included in China’s new five-year plan, set to be released March 5. If fulfilled, the pledge could drastically reduce global carbon emissions and slow global warming while creating a $16 trillion industry in the next 40 years, driving investment in green technologies. To reach its goal, China will have to overhaul its economy—and rally its tech sector.
We’ve been asking ourselves how China’s tech sector will play a role in this transformation. That’s why we’ve decided to start this newsletter. For the next few months, we’re going to take you on a deep dive into clean technology, or cleantech, in China. We’ll be identifying promising technologies and companies, and looking into who is investing in the industry.
We will support green technology innovation, promote clean production, develop the environmental protection industry, and promote green retrofitting of key industries and important fields.
China’s 14th Five-Year Plan guidelines, published in November
What do we mean by cleantech? The name is applied to everything from energy production to trash sorting startups. We’ve decided to go broad and thematic, so we’ll hazard a broad definition: Cleantech encompasses technologies that reduce our negative impact on the environment by improving energy efficiency and using resources in a more sustainable way.
Within this scope, we’ll find a lot of activity. In 2016, Chinese lawmakers announced plans to rapidly decrease pollution, calling for “significant integration” between the country’s energy and tech sectors. At the same time, authorities laid out plans to create green cities, complete with electrified transport and eco-friendly buildings.
Underpinning these projects is a smorgasbord of new construction technologies, smart waste management systems, new energy vehicles, air treatment and carbon capture technologies, better water treatment, new forms of distributed energy production, and energy storage.
Several of these technologies have already been deployed around the country. In 2019, the Chinese government rolled out smart trash-sorting systems in a mass recycling push aiming to cut down on municipal waste. These devices began appearing in cities around the country amid the government’s mandatory trash-sorting campaigns. They aim to lessen the effort involved in the recycling process.
One company that runs the automatic waste-sorting stations is Dog (Xiaohuanggou). The firm has raised more than RMB 1 billion and operates in 41 cities around China. It has 6 million registered users, according to its website (in Chinese).
Meanwhile, Alibaba affiliate Ant Group started providing services to connect its users with online recycling platforms, allowing them to sell their recyclable waste to these companies.
Mobility has long been a significant focus, particularly as a means of reducing carbon emissions. China has subsequently become the biggest electric vehicle (EV) market in the world. Private companies and the government have rallied to set up a network of EV charging stations to match the scale of EV sales.
The country is now home to 807,000 charging stations, though growth up to this point has been slow. Meanwhile, EV makers like Nio have experimented with battery swap systems. The aim is to reduce worries about the range of EVs by attempting to reach access parity to gas stations and electrify China’s auto sector.
China has already invested more than any other country in cleantech, and shown that when the state backs an industry, it can get results. Apart from being the world’s biggest EV manufacturer, it is also the world’s largest producer of solar panels. Unlike its EVs, which are largely sold in the domestic market, China supplies the world with tech needed to harness the sun’s energy.
JinkoSolar is one example. The New York-listed company expected to sell 19 gigawatts of solar panel capacity in 2020, according to its third-quarter earnings call. That figure represents around half of all the solar capacity installed in China during 2020.
China, and companies like JinkoSolar, have driven the price of solar panels so low that they are now barely considered tech.
Nonetheless, China’s government and private enterprises are going to have to do a lot more if national emissions goals are to be reached by 2060. In order to hit the country’s net zero-goals, Chinese investment could reach up to $16 trillion by 2060— generating perhaps 40 million jobs, according to a report by Goldman Sachs.
The company’s analysts expect investment to peak at $650 billion in 2040. That would represent up to 2% of China’s GDP for that year.
Meanwhile, researchers from China’s prestigious Tsinghua University have made similar predictions, saying that the country would need to spend RMB 100 trillion ($15 trillion) over the next 30 years to reach carbon net zero by 2060.
On Feb. 1, the country rolled out a national carbon trading system to reduce carbon intensity. Participation is currently mandatory for companies in the energy sector, and allows these firms to buy and sell emissions credits. A company enrolled in the system must either meet its emissions targets or buy credits from other firms that have been more successful at lowering their emissions. The government is expected to expand the trading system to other industries in the future.
Caps on emissions and programs that reduce intensity such as this could prompt investment in eco-friendly technologies, further spurring investment in tech that cuts emissions.
Numerous Chinese venture capital firms have been established to fund startups focused on clean technologies ranging from energy generation and efficiency to sustainable agriculture. One of these companies is Tsing Capital. The firm has invested in a slew of startups that have become household names in cleantech, including drone maker eHang, China Hydro, and US-based Lucid Motors.
China has a long way to go to clean up its pollution. The country has spent big on solar panels but has struggled to ditch coal. It continues to rely on one of its mosted trusted, but dirty, methods of stimulating the economy.
Construction is huge in China, accounting for around 7% of China’s GDP. In times of crisis, the country accelerates spending on infrastructure projects to stimulate the economy. In 2008, after the global financial crisis, the country pushed spending on massive road and rail developments.
Now, it’s doing the same to mitigate the economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic, spending hundreds of billions of yuan on some of its most ambitious projects.
But infrastructure investment has consequences. More than a third of all pollution around the globe is generated by construction and buildings—and China is the most prolific builder in the world. In China, that share appears to be lower, with some research indicating that China’s construction industry could be responsible for only a fifth of its total carbon emissions.
The country is actually building coal-burning power plants, partly as a means to drive its post-COVID-19 economy. In 2020 alone, China’s power industry proposed adding nearly 41 gigawatts of coal-burning capacity, according to an analysis by the Global Energy Monitor and the Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air (CREA). That figure is the equivalent to the output of all the coal-burning power stations in South Africa. The central government may attempt to rein in construction of these power sources in the upcoming five-year plan.
Meanwhile, several government agencies have failed to buy into environmental protection policies and to promote low carbon energy sources. The central government is finally reacting. In a harshly worded report last month (in Chinese), government inspectors hit out at the China National Energy Administration (NEA), the country’s energy authority, for failing to protect the environment and for building coal power plants in polluted areas.
This is as big as it gets in China’s energy policy … the final report is brutal in calling out failure to rein in coal.
Lauri Myllyvirta, lead analyst at CREA, who has written about China’s environmental policies, on Twitter
The NEA is not alone. China’s forestry agency was criticized for not providing sufficient environmental protections to improve forest quality. The government inspection group has also censured officials from six cities on branches of the Yangtze River for failing to deal with pollution leaking into the Yangtze River Basin. These areas included Suining in China’s southwestern Sichuan Province and Xiaogan in the central Chinese province of Hubei.
But as the country’s current five-year plan winds down, there appears to be a real push to move the needle on emissions. This will mean even bigger investments in clean technology.
We’ll be back next month with a look at the biggest players in China’s cleantech industry.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
In this episode, James and Elliott review the winners and losers of 2020, what they got right and what they got wrong, as well as the lessons they learned. They also look forward to the rest of 2021, anticipating trends, as well as companies to watch. They discuss Bilibili, Alibaba, Ant, Xiaomi, Baidu, and more.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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On Nov. 11, 2019, Chinese people collectively bought more goods online than the population of any country on any other day since the invention of the internet—or of commerce, for that matter.
Known as Singles Day, the promotion is China’s biggest annual online shopping festival, and eclipses the sales of the US’s Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined. In 2020, merchants on online platforms including Alibaba’s Tmall and Taobao, JD.com, and Pinduoduo, sold more than RMB 330 billion (around $51.3 billion) worth of goods in 24 hours, significantly lower than in 2019, according to data from China-based data services company Syntun.
That figure, known as gross merchandise volume (GMV), is equivalent to the price of more than 900,000 China-made Teslas or 6,600 of China’s homegrown passenger jets.
GMV is the total value of goods sold through a particular marketplace over a certain period of time. The money isn’t the e-commerce platform’s revenue—it’s a measure of how much money is going to the merchants that list their products on the platforms. Investors track it closely to get a sense of an e-commerce platform’s scale.
The Big Sell is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the trends shaping China’s vast e-commerce marketplaces. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Platforms that report GMV make a big deal out of it. E-commerce companies plaster live totals on massive screens at media events and push these figures to investors as beacons of growth. But longer-term numbers are usually released only annually.
Yet, the concept is sneakily deceptive. There is no standard definition for GMV—platforms measure their own sales figures in different ways, essentially creating their own definitions.
Every penny a customer commits to pay on a platform is counted as part of GMV—whether or not they pay, or later get the money refunded.
Imagine this scenario, a popular one among internet users in China. It’s 11:59 p.m. on Nov. 10. You have one minute to go until Singles Day promotions begin. Your shopping cart is full, stocked with items whose prices will fall as soon as the clock strikes 12. But, in the back of your mind, you wonder if you should be buying RMB 5,000 worth of goods.
The moment comes. You quickly tap the pay button before your precious goods sell out. It’s done—your bank balance falls by RMB 5,000, while Alibaba books another RMB 5,000 in GMV.
But in the morning, you wake up feeling guilty. Slowly, you realize that you probably don’t need another winter coat, so you cancel the order.
Down in Yiwu, the merchant doesn’t mind too much—in fact, it helps them climb in search results. They’re busy buying and canceling thousands of orders for the same coat from dummy accounts, boosting their rank.
Meanwhile, in Hangzhou, Alibaba’s GMV ticker keeps rising, undeterred by thousands of similar cancellations that may be processed every minute. In fact, that ticker will never fall, because GMV totals include all transactions on a platform, even when those goods are cancelled or returned.
According to Alibaba’s 2019 annual report, the company GMV figures include all orders for products and services on its platform regardless of whether items are actually sold, delivered, or returned. Rival e-commerce platforms JD.com and Pinduoduo also include unfulfilled orders in their GMV totals.
“Like other measures of economic scale, such as GDP, GMV is imperfect. Depending on the company definition, it can include unpaid orders, orders that have been added to cart but ultimately not purchased, cancelled orders, or returned orders,” Michael Norris, research and strategy lead at AgencyChina, told TechNode.
Aside from including cancelled or returned orders, Alibaba, JD.com, and Pinduoduo all include shipping costs in their GMV calculations, further inflating sales volume.
The metric may be flawed, but it’s the only game in town when it comes to shopping festivals.
GMV calculations have even led to spats between rival e-commerce platforms. In 2017, Alibaba’s public relations head mocked JD.com for releasing an extended 11-day sales figure, as it always does. JD.com racked up RMB 127 billion in GMV between Nov. 1 and Nov. 11 while Alibaba’s figure reached RMB 164 billion in 24 hours.
JD Retail’s then chief marketing officer and now CEO, Xu Lei, hit back at the e-commerce giant, saying that Alibaba’s 24-hour GMV figures were driven by pent-up consumption from users all looking for a discount on one day of sales. Alibaba has now extended its Singles Day promotions to 11 days.
Beyond all of the generous inclusions in GMV, there is something more insidious that boosts sales metrics: brushed orders. Here, stores on e-commerce platforms pay people to order items that are very cheap or are cancelled later. A store’s motivation can be higher seller ratings or increased visibility of their products in search results.
China’s government is attempting to root out brushed orders. In June, Beijing tax authorities sent out alerts to a group of nearly 2,000 merchants who were required to make supplementary tax payments based on inflated numbers that resulted from brushed orders. The government has also proposed a law that would make merchants liable to pay tax on falsified sales.
“Brand retailers nowadays don’t do much of that anymore, but small mom-and-pop merchants use brushing as a service to market their products during [shopping] festivals, ” said Li Junheng, founder of JL Warren Capital, a China-focused equity research firm.
Investors are aware of the pitfalls of the GMV figures e-commerce platforms report and attempt to adjust for brushed and unfulfilled orders to get a better sense of what a company’s “real” GMV may be.
“I typically apply a discount rate of between 20% and 40%, depending on the platform,” said AgencyChina’s Norris.
Investors also get around misleading numbers by comparing figures year on year, as opposed to using the absolute values.
With the pandemic, livestreaming sales hit the big time, and it’s only expected to become more popular. The explosion in popularity could create even more problems for people trying to separate the signal from the noise in GMV figures.
The problem? Livestream purchases have extremely high return rates, more so than any other type of purchase.
“A general rule of thumb is that the GMV sold during livestreaming sessions have the highest return rates, as they target compulsive shoppers,” said Li. Depending on the category, up to 50% of all purchases are returned. The effects can be at their worst when livestreams are hosted by online influencers, who have an incentive to book as many orders as possible to boost their value as advertisers.
According to Alibaba, more than 30 livestreaming channels on its platforms generated in excess of RMB 100 million in sales each during last year’s 11-day Singles Day shopping festival. Over 500 channels generated RMB 10 million each during the same period.
The figures will only increase. KPMG expected livestreaming e-commerce in China to reach more than RMB 1 trillion in 2020, up from RMB 430 billion in 2019. With half of all goods being returned, reported GMV metrics could become far less useful to gauge a platform’s scale.
“Over time, as livestream e-commerce becomes a bigger chunk of the overall e-commerce pie, analysts will need to adjust the discount rate they apply to platform GMV,” said Norris.
]]>China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
This week’s guest is Capucine Cogné, a real estate industry specialist based in Chengdu who has been following the rise and fall of China’s “second landlord” platforms. She discusses what led to their rise, the unique circumstances of their fall, and who might stand to benefit as the industry now consolidates.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts.
This week, Tu Le from Sino Auto Insights joins the show to discuss the stratospheric rise that electric vehicle stocks have experienced this year, and what those firms will need to achieve in order to justify their share prices. They also discuss the major players on the software side of the EV equation.
Hosts may have interest in some of the stocks discussed. The discussion should not be construed as investment advice or a solicitation of services.
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China Tech Investor is a weekly look at China’s tech companies through the lens of investment. Each week, hosts Elliott Zaagman and James Hull go through their watch list of publicly listed tech companies and also interview experts on issues affecting the macroeconomy and the stock prices of China’s tech companies.
Make sure you don’t miss anything. Check out our lineup of China tech podcasts
This week, Michael Norris is back for his regular earnings check-in, as the guys go over the calls from Bilibili, Pinduoduo, and Tencent, including Bilibili’s formula for success, and the increasingly intense debate between Pinduoduo’s longs and shorts.
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What do the global empires of China’s tech giants look like? I began asking myself this question months before starting Expanding Empires, a reporting effort to map out the global tech investment footprint of China’s biggest investors. Now, we’re bringing it to an end.
Over the past six months, I’ve scraped, analyzed, and visualized data to provide a better picture of where China’s biggest tech companies are investing, how the geopolitical climate has led to dramatic shifts in their focus, and where they might be headed next.
China’s tech giants have a massive overseas presence. While you might not see their logos on the apps and digital services you use everyday, they have backed some of the world’s biggest tech firms.
The answer to my initial inquiry, it turns out, is complicated.
How Chinese companies like Alibaba, Tencent, Meituan, and Xiaomi approach their burgeoning empires abroad is as varied as the countries in which they invest.
After half a year of exploring Chinese tech companies’ investments abroad, Expanding Empires’ time has come to an end. But we aren’t downsizing our coverage of China tech: we’re already preparing to launch a new newsletter for TechNode members. Keep an eye open for details.
Funding rounds in which Chinese tech companies have participated—or in numerous cases, lead—have created some of the world’s biggest tech giants. In the US, these include mobility companies Uber, Tesla, and Lyft; in India, Paytm, Flipkart, and Bigbasket; and in Southeast Asia, e-commerce giants Lazada and Sea Limited.
For the final edition of Expanding Empires, we look back at where overseas China tech investment started, how things have changed, and where it’s going. While each company has its own trajectory, there are some broad trends that appear to be defining China’s involvement in the global tech industry.
It all started in the US. In 2008, just months before the housing bubble burst, before Lehman Brothers collapsed, before the global economy plummeted into a deep recession, Tencent bet on a little-known gaming studio in San Francisco.
An $11 million investment in Outspark set the tone for Tencent’s rapid expansion abroad. The Chinese company would soon become the biggest gaming firm in the world. But more importantly, the investment marked the beginning of China’s scramble for a foothold in the US tech industry.
By 2015, seven years after Tencent’s first US investment, Chinese tech giants including Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, and Xiaomi had taken part in nearly 40 funding rounds worth a combined $2.4 billion for US companies.
China’s investment footprint in the US was largely driven by Tencent and Alibaba, and some of the funding rounds in which these companies took part were massive. In 2016, Alibaba participated in a $1 billion round for mobility firm Lyft. Two years later, Tencent took part in a $9 billion round for Uber.
The list of big ticket names goes on: Tencent invested in Tesla, Reddit, and Universal Music Group. Alibaba plowed money in Magic Leap, Snap, and participated in several rounds for Lyft.
Tencent is unique among its Chinese counterparts—it’s far more global. The company has funded more than 140 companies outside China—double that of Alibaba. Many of these were early-stage investments.
2015 to 2017 marked a spring in Chinese tech investment in the US. By the end of 2017, Chinese companies had taken part in more than 100 rounds for US companies, totalling more than $9 billion.
But by 2018, that had all begun to change.
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Chinese tech companies’ investments appeared to be paying off. Valuations of companies they had invested in soared. They were participating in funding rounds with unprecedented frequency.
In 2016, Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu took part in 20 rounds for US companies. But by 2019, that had fallen to a meagre three.
What had happened? One reason is the allure of Asia’s developing markets. But another is politics.
The Trump administration had become increasingly critical of China, and began pushing back against some of the country’s biggest tech companies. Chinese telecommunications giants ZTE and Huawei quickly fell victim to US scrutiny. Washington’s offensive nearly killed ZTE after the company was found to have violated American sanctions against Iran and North Korea.
But the scrutiny also extended to foreign investments in the US—particularly those that came from China.
In late 2018, the US changed its foreign investment rules and began scrutinizing deals for non-controlling stakes in US firms. Previously, investment reviews only took place when a foreign firm took a majority stake in a US company.
The changes were directed firmly at Chinese companies, as lawmakers feared their investments were abetting tech transfers from the US to China.
The US-China Investment Project estimates that Chinese venture funding in the US totaled $400 million in the first quarter of 2020, down from $640 million during the same period in 2019, and $1 billion in 2018. A global pandemic beginning in China also contributed to this fall.
The resulting dropoff in investment was “distinctively Chinese,” according to a report by the US-China Investment Project. Despite the decrease in Chinese investment, overall funding of US startups largely remained the same.
Driven away from the US by increased regulation and attracted by the potential of big returns from developing markets, China tech quickly turned to the other side of the Pacific, honing in on South and Southeast Asia.
READ MORE:
Before the bans, China tech investment turned away from US
Alibaba had seen potential for growth in Southeast Asia and India for years. In 2016, the company bought Southeast Asia’s biggest e-commerce company: Singapore-headquartered Lazada.
The deal was Alibaba’s biggest overseas investment. It followed up a year later with another $1 billion investment, upping its stake from 51% to 83%. Then, in 2018, it plowed in another $2 billion.
The move to Southeast Asia coincided with its pull back from America. Between 2010 and 2015 Alibaba participated in 17 US-based rounds. But since 2018, that number dropped to five. During the same period, Alibaba has taken part in 19 rounds in India and eight in Southeast Asia.
Tencent made similar moves, though the majority of its investments are in the US. The company first invested in Southeast Asia in 2016, when it participated in a round for internet platform provider Sea Limited for an undisclosed amount. It followed up with an additional $1.4 billion round in 2019. Sea runs some of the region’s biggest online platforms including e-commerce service Shoppee and gaming platform Garena.
Since then, Tencent and Alibaba have divided up Southeast Asia and India. The battle between these two companies—as well as Xiaomi—is focused on fintech and e-commerce.
Despite Alibaba and Tencent operating their own digital payment platforms in several countries across Southeast Asia, the two companies have backed more than a dozen e-wallets in the region and India—and no one startup is backed by both.
Alibaba and Tencent have taken different approaches when backing e-wallets. While Alibaba backs a mix of conglomerates that run e-wallets as part of a wider business, as well as fintech-first companies, Tencent has only backed the conglomerates.
In Southeast Asia, on the side of Alibaba and its fintech affiliate Ant Group are Myanmar’s Wave Money, Thailand’s Truemoney, as well as Lazada and internet service platform Grab, which run e-wallets as part of their business. In India, the two Chinese companies have funded Paytm.
Meanwhile, Tencent has backed Sea Limited, which operates Airpay and Shopeepay; Gojek and its Gopay system in Southeast Asia; as well as Swiggy Wallet and Ola Wallet in India.
But it’s not just fintech. For Chinese companies, the stakes for tech investment are high in India and Southeast Asia at large.
“These investments are building the muscles for a world-class clash of titans—with the big guys competing head to head and local players serving as proxies for the foreign giants,” consultancy Bain & Company said in a report describing the scramble for market share in the region.
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Chinese tech giants have tens of billions at stake in India
Proxy war? Alibaba, Tencent draw lines across Southeast Asian unicorn scene
While the US has made it more difficult for Chinese companies to invest and competition in Southeast Asia heats up, another market has caught the attention of China’s tech companies: Africa.
Home to 1.3 billion people and six of the world’s ten fastest growing economies, the continent has a thriving tech scene. Firms like Huawei and ZTE have a long history in Africa. Roughtly 70% of all 4G base stations on the continent are made by Huawei.
But as connectivity across the continent improves, other Chinese companies have seen opportunities in providing—and backing—digital services.
Tencent, gaming giant Netease, Meituan, and smartphone maker Transsion have already bet on African companies. Meanwhile, Alibaba has taken a different approach by launching training programs for aspiring African entrepreneurs.
Their presence on the continent is still modest, but has grown steadily since 2018, with 2019 seeing record amounts of Chinese involvement in Africa’s tech sector.
“Africa is often still a greenfields continent where Chinese companies have a more equal or better chance to compete,” Africa Analysis’ Dobek Pater told the South China Morning Post last year.
Transsion, which controls around 40% of the continent’s smartphone market, has started delving into digital services in Africa. In 2015, the company launched music streaming service Boomplay through a joint venture with Netease. Primarily focused on the African market, 85% of its users come from Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania.
Startups in Africa raised a total of $2 billion in 2019, according to data from global investment firm Partech. While a small percentage of the total came from China, Africa has seen an increase in attention from Chinese investors.
Chinese-owned, Norway-based software company Opera in 2017 pledged to invest $100 million in Africa’s digital economy. The company later launched Opay, a super app that included payments and delivery services, in Nigeria.
Meanwhile, Africa-focused fintech platform Palmpay launched in Nigeria after receiving $40 million in investment from Transsion and Netease. The deal also meant that Palmpay would come pre-installed on 40 million on Transsion’s phones this year.
Ant Group, which runs one of China’s most popular payment platforms, has also taken notice. In 2019, the company partnered with Flutterwave, a Silicon Valley- and Lagos-based fintech company, adding Alipay as a payment method for Flutterwave’s 60,000 merchants. Ant has also partnered with South African mobile operator Vodacom to launch a payments app in the country.
READ MORE:
China tech in Africa: flip phones to fintech
From sanctions on Chinese companies in the US to uncertainty from app bans in India, Chinese tech investors have had a rough ride. But there have also been many successes. In some cases, the effects of their influence have been subtle, quietly backing startups worldwide. In others, like Alibaba’s takeover of Lazada, their funding has allowed them to take massive portions of a developing market.
So what’s next? One of the world’s largest continents. Only time will tell how the battles between these Chinese companies, as well as with their US counterparts, will play out.
]]>For the past ten years, some of China’s biggest companies have divided the country’s tech industry. Now, they’re fighting proxy wars in the emerging markets of Southeast Asia and India, battling it out for a share of the regions’ digital real estate.
China’s tech giants are major players in India and Southeast Asia. They’ve had a hang in some of the regions’ biggest unicorns, including internet platform provider Sea Limited, e-commerce titan Lazada, food delivery giant Swiggy, and super app Gojek.
Expanding Empires is TechNode’s monthly data-driven newsletter looking at where and how Chinese tech majors are investing in up-and-comers around the world. Available to TechNode Squared members.
“These investments are building the muscles for a world-class clash of titans—with the big guys competing head to head and local players serving as proxies for the foreign giants,” consultancy Bain & Company said in a report describing the scramble for market share in Southeast Asia.
China’s tech giants are known as jealous backers. When Chinese startups take money from a tech major, they’re often committing to a side and its associated ecosystem. That’s why Tencent invested in Pinduoduo—the e-commerce company’s business model is based on users getting their Wechat contacts to buy items with them.
How much do these proxy wars spill over into Chinese tech giants’ new stomping grounds—Southeast Asia and India? I wanted to know, so over the past few weeks I’ve scraped, cross-referenced, and analyzed public data to map just how divided the digital landscape is in India and Southeast Asia. Here’s what I found:
In the past five years, companies including social media and gaming giant Tencent, e-commerce firm Alibaba and its fintech affiliate Ant Group, search company Baidu, and smartphone maker Xiaomi have participated in 89 funding rounds totalling nearly $26 billion for Indian and Southeast Asian startups.
Simultaneously, Chinese investment has shifted away from startups in the US to those in Southeast Asia and India as a result of rising US-China geopolitical tensions.
Funding round totals
Corporate giants jealously guard information about their investments in order to avoid tipping off their rivals. As a result, our data includes the total value of each funding round—a figure that includes contributions from other investors. While the data is incomplete, it still functions as a proxy for undisclosed numbers, and allows us to gauge Chinese tech giants’ stakes in various industries and regions.
Southeast Asia and India’s underbanked population are driving a fintech boom.
Underbanked people typically don’t have sufficient access to commercial banking services. But with the advent of digital wallets in the region, they’re able to hail a ride, buy online, and order food for delivery. The higher availability of these platforms then stimulates a need for more fintech services.
According to Bain & Company, digital payments in Southeast Asia have reached an “inflection point,” with transactions expected to reach $1 trillion by 2025.
Chinese tech majors don’t want to miss out. While Tencent and Alibaba operate their own digital payment platforms in several countries around Southeast Asia, the two companies have backed more than a dozen digital payment platforms in the region and India.
These companies collectively account for around 150 million users in Southeast Asia, according to a report by Dealstreetasia. Meanwhile, in India, that number reached more than 350 million in 2019.
Tencent and Alibaba are each recruiting their own team. No fintech startup in the two regions has been backed by both companies.
We don’t know exactly how much Alibaba and Ant invested into e-wallets—of these investments, most were either for undisclosed amounts or into large conglomerates whose e-wallets are not the whole show. The one disclosed e-wallet investment, into Myanmar’s Wave Money, was for $73.5 million.
Alibaba has backed companies that are focused solely on digital payments, including WaveMoney and Thailand-based Truemoney, as well as large conglomerates that offer payment services among others, including e-commerce giant Lazada and internet service platform Grab. In India, the two Chinese giants have invested in digital payments platform Paytm.
Tencent has taken a different approach. The company hasn’t invested in any e-wallet-first companies, but has taken stakes in several large firms that, like Wechat, offer wallets.
Tencent has taken parts in rounds for Southeast Asia and Indian companies that total $9.4 billion. These companies include Sea Limited, which operates Airpay and Shopeepay; Gojek and its Gopay system in Southeast Asia; as well as Swiggy Wallet and Ola Wallet in India.
E-wallets are being used for services ranging from ride-hailing to food delivery to e-commerce.
In Malaysia, the government is incentivizing use of digital payments by offering MYR 450 million ($108 million) initiative, giving MYR 30 to all Malaysians older than 18 who earn less than MYR 8,333 a month. The incentive can be claimed using a variety of e-wallets, including Grabpay.
Like the e-wallets, Chinese tech majors are divvying up these digital commerce platforms.
E-commerce is one major battleground. China’s tech giants have divided up their Southeast Asian counterparts. On the Tencent-affiliated side, we have Singapore-based Sea Limited—a behemoth covering e-commerce, payments, and gaming. On Alibaba’s side, we have Lazada, a Singapore headquartered e-commerce company the Chinese giant acquired in 2016 for $1 billion.
The same is true in India, where the two companies have bifurcated the country’s e-commerce and food delivery sectors. While Alibaba backed food delivery startup Zomato. Tencent funded Swiggy. While Alibaba backed Bigbasket, Tencent funded Flipkart.
Earlier this year, Zomato was reportedly in talks with Bigbasket to offer groceries on its food delivery platform. Both companies are backed by Alibaba.
Tencent and Alibaba have participated in rounds for e-commerce companies in the region worth a total of $12.8 billion. This total includes some investments we have already counted above as digital payments digital payments.
Meanwhile, Chinese lifestyle services giant Tencent-backed Meituan, a far less active international investor than either Alibaba and Tencent, has also backed Swiggy.
Chinese tech firms are not only competing among each other, but also with their US counterparts, including Amazon, Facebook, and Google.
With a combined urban population of around 800 million people, getting people from one place to another has become ever more important. Ride-hailing platforms have stepped in to fill this gap.
Several Chinese tech firms have funded mobility startups in Southeast Asia and India, but there is less of a clear cut divide. Southeast Asia’s two biggest mobility companies, Grab and Gojek, compete head-to-head in Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore, and Thailand. These two firms also offer a host of other services, including food delivery and payments.
What happens when new giants with connections to Tencent and Alibaba enter the field? Well, it depends: Meituan, backed by Tencent, has joined the older company in backing Gojek and Swiggy.
Didi is a boundary-crosser—it was formed by a merger between Tencent- and Alibaba-backed ride-hailing firms—but has integrated with the Tencent ecosystem. However, it joined with Alibaba to back Grab.
Gojek has raised $4.8 billion from funding rounds in which Tencent and Meituan took part, while details of Alibaba’s 2018 investment in Grab were not disclosed. Now, Alibaba is reportedly looking to invest $3 billion in the Southeast Asian mobility firm. Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi took part in two of Grab’s funding rounds, worth $2.9 billion.
In India, Xiaomi and Tencent are dividing up the country’s ride-hailing market. In 2017, Tencent invested in Ola Cabs as part of a $2 billion funding round. Then, earlier this year, Xiaomi backed Oye! Rickshaw—a company that provides last-mile electric rickshaw rides—as part of the company’s $10 million Series A.
Chinese companies may have a harder time investing in India startups in the future. Indian officials this year launched an offensive banning more than 100 apps operated by Chinese companies and increasing scrutiny of investments from neighboring countries.
For China’s tech giants, Southeast Asia is an important market, and they’re in it for the long haul. Several companies have announced plans to bolster their presence in the region over the next new months.
Tencent said in September that it had opened a new office in Singapore in an effort to boost its business in the region. Meanwhile, Bytedance reportedly plans to invest billions of dollars and recruit hundreds of employees in Singapore in the next few years. A source told CNBC that Bytedance had already begun moving engineers to the city, with previous reports claim the company aims to set up a data center to back up US data.
The investment war between China’s biggest tech firms will likely only intensify as companies double down on the region’s burgeoning digital economy. But they won’t just be competing among each other.
US tech giants are shown interest in investing in the same companies Alibaba and Tencent already have stakes. In 2018, Microsoft invested in Grab. Meanwhile, Amazon may be zeroing in on Gojek and Google is reportedly taking part in a $350 round for Indonesian e-commerce firm Tokopedia—one of Alibaba’s portfolio companies.
The future battle for Southeast Asia may not be between Chinese tech giants, but US companies and their Chinese counterparts.
]]>Ant Group, Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba’s payments affiliate, is cutting support and funding to the overseas e-wallet companies it has invested in as the company pulls back from ambitions to become a global leader in payments, Reuters reported.
Why it matters: Ant Group has made headlines over the past few months over its plans for a dual listing in Hong Kong and Shanghai. The company aims to raise $34.4 billion—potentially the largest IPO in history.
Details: Ant Group is now scaling back the hundreds of millions of dollars the company spent each year on its overseas fintech investments, while bringing its support employees back home, according to Reuters’ sources in nine countries.
]]>READ MORE: Ant Group to close Hong Kong order books early on strong IPO demand
I love lurking on Linkedin. A couple of weeks ago, something struck me. While Tiktok was facing the prospect of a US ban under an Aug. 7 executive order, many people in my European networks were delighted to announce that they were joining the short video company. Countless emojis were harmed in the making of these Linkedin posts.
As its future in the US is under threat, Tiktok appears to be trying to fortify its operations in Europe. On Tiktok’s careers site, 272 jobs are posted in Europe (excluding Russia) at the time of writing. Dublin takes the lead with 117 jobs, London comes second with 78, and Germany third with a total of 34. Germany is hiring for offices in Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg. Positions in Madrid, Paris, Stockholm, Warsaw, and Milan are also seeking candidates.
In Europe, Tiktok’s hiring patterns reflect its growing ambitions on the continent and a push to localize and clear the bloc’s data security hurdles.
A data sweep on Twitter conducted by TechNode indicates that Tiktok has ramped up its hiring in Europe. Bytedance employees and job advertising services including the UK’s Job Centre Plus, a state-run employment platform, have mentioned jobs at Tiktok more frequently in recent months.
In August, 42 links to the Tiktok global careers website were posted on Twitter, compared to 12 in February.
“It’s quite incredible how many people they’re bringing on board. Every week there’s new people,” a new hire who joined Tiktok’s European operations in August told TechNode.
Open positions on the company’s website include a wide variety of roles, from advertising and brand strategists to privacy specialists. Tiktok appears intent on localization, seeking fluent speakers in most European languages, such as Swedish, Hungarian, and Greek.
“Of course everybody is looking at what’s happening in the US,” the recent hire said, “but there’s no anxiety. On the contrary, everyone is very optimistic.”
Despite the ongoing row with Washington, Tiktok hasn’t taken down its job listings in the US. Currently, 465 positions are listed as available in the US on the app’s website.
READ MORE: China tech faces double compliance challenge in Europe
Bytedance’s continued hiring for the popular video app shows it is optimistic about the European market, despite criticism over its privacy policy. Regulators have expressed concern over personal data flowing from the EU to China, the app’s handling of minors’ data and consent. But as long as Tiktok complies with local data regulations, the company should be safe in Europe, experts told TechNode.
Tiktok currently has over 1,600 employees based in Europe, roughly 1,300 of whom are based in the UK and Ireland, the company said in a statement Monday.
A Europe-wide ban is “unlikely,” said Jan Stryjak, Associate Research Director at Counterpoint Research. “Tiktok has not faced the same levels of scrutiny and political grandstanding in Europe as in the US,” he said, so it makes sense that it “looks to establish itself to build on its rapid growth in the region.”
In Europe, regulators have tried to appear neutral. “I am not in the business of banning any company, I am in the business of explaining very clearly what are our rules,” EU Commission Internal Market Commissioner Thierry Bretton told Politico earlier this month.
“In the short-term, I wouldn’t expect any comparable moves on Tiktok in Europe to match US actions,” Andrew Small, associate senior policy fellow at think tank European Council on Foreign Relations, told TechNode.
By contrast, the situation around Huawei includes “fundamental questions” about the company’s role in Europe’s digital infrastructure and “longstanding issues about Chinese subsidies undermining European telecoms firms,” he said.
Tiktok does not provoke the same sensitivities. “The issues at stake with Tiktok relate to censorship and data use, neither of which is likely to lead to an outright ban, and there will be no inherent objection to Tiktok hiring and investing in Europe either,” said Small.
New data privacy and security rules in the European bloc are compelling Tiktok to reconfigure its global operations.
Bretton stressed that the “key subject” when it comes to Tiktok operating within the bloc is data, highlighting the rigor of Europe’s data security and privacy rules in comparison to China.
“The EU has not had to deal with this issue on a really major scale given that Chinese apps have not made many inroads with European consumers,” Small said.
In August, the European Court of Justice ruled that personal data collected on EU citizens can only be transferred to third countries that have similar privacy regimes. The decision, known as Schrems II, could mean that personal data collected by Tiktok on European citizens can never be legally transferred to China.
A few weeks after the ruling, Tiktok said its Irish and UK entities will be taking over data management for European users from its US operations. Shortly after, the company announced plans for a new data center in Dublin. According to company statements, the data center will form part of a “Privacy and Safety Hub” for Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
Bytedance said it plans to spend €420 million ($500 million) on the Dublin data center. The investment will “create hundreds of jobs” in the city, said Roland Cloutier, Tiktok’s Global Chief Information Security Officer in a blog post.
Cloutier previously worked at Automatic Data Processing, a Nasdaq-listed HR systems provider, as well as US computer manufacturer Dell.
The job listings on Tiktok’s website appear to line up with this announcement. Dublin is the city with the most job openings.
But the Dublin data center doesn’t mean that Tiktok can put the data security issue to bed.
The EU is known for having some of the world’s most stringent personal data protection rules, known as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).
In June, the European Data Protection Board, an EU body in charge of the application of the GDPR, set up a task force to probe Tiktok’s data processing activities and privacy practices across the EU, China’s Caixin reported.
Privacy watchdogs in France and the Netherlands have also launched inquiries into Tiktok’s privacy policies, especially as they pertain to Tiktok’s underage users.
Tiktok has not replied to a Sept. 15 email seeking comment.
Tiktok’s job listings show that politics have not dented its ambitions to be a true multinational. The company is charging ahead with establishing regional hubs and localization teams in key European cities, all answering to a CEO currently based in California.
London ranks second among European cities in active jobs listings on Tiktok’s careers website. The short video app operator is reportedly considering moving its headquarters from Beijing to London, British media reported in August.
“A new global headquarters in London could be a huge boon for the UK’s job market, which has suffered in recent months due to the Covid-19 pandemic,” Stryjak said.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson will welcome the Tiktok headquarters with open arms, risking the wrath of US President Donald Trump, UK media has reported.
The British government is reportedly split over the potential Tiktok move. Trade and tech officials and ministers are at odds over how to handle the Chinese tech company, the Telegraph reported citing UK government sources familiar with the matter.
Germany, which ranks third in the number of listed job openings, represents a big market with a big pool of tech talent, experts told TechNode.
It’s also a strategic location that Tiktok can use to “buy some goodwill, given its outsized influence over the European debate,” Small said.
Yet those who decide to join the company in these times are taking on a lot of uncertainty. The app’s US and EU operations were nearly sold to Microsoft after pressure from the US government. After weeks of speculation about a deal with Microsoft, the company has reportedly settled on a partnership with Oracle instead.
TechNode found two people who have been approached by recruiters. Both said they ignored the recruiters’ messages as they were not interested in working for the short video app. “Tiktok is stupid,” one of them said.
But Linkedin job updates indicate that Tiktok’s attempts to poach top tech talent have been successful at times.
Many of the new hires came from some of the West’s biggest companies, including big tech. The person who onboarded recently said the salary offer was “very competitive” but didn’t give any further details. But “it wasn’t like I couldn’t trust my eyes,” they said.
Another new hire said that they were under a non-disclosure agreement that is valid for 100 days after onboarding.
In a Linkedin search, TechNode identified one person who worked at Amazon for seven years in Germany and recently said they joined the Bytedance app in September. A UK-based professional with four years of experience at Google and three years of experience at Netflix said they took a position at Tiktok in July. Another person who was at Google for two years also said they joined the app in September.
The European who is considering a position said that working for the Chinese company in the midst of an international storm seemed “insane” at first, but that they have come to appreciate the challenge.
The recent hire said that Tiktok is “an exciting place to work in at the moment, regardless of how safe this job is in the long term.
“We all know that this industry is moving very fast. But it’s really interesting to be part of this and get this experience at this time,” they said.
]]>China tech in Africa is nothing new. Telecommunications giant Huawei has built around 70% of the continent’s 4G networks. Smartphone manufacturer Transsion commands 40% of Africa’s smartphone market.
Much of the activity by tech firms has focused on telecommunications infrastructure and the handset market. But as the infrastructure becomes more developed, Chinese companies are increasingly offering a new slate of digital services and backing novel African startups, with a focus on inclusive financial services.
Expanding Empires is TechNode’s monthly data-driven newsletter looking at where and how Chinese tech majors are investing in up-and-comers around the world. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Over the past few months, TechNode has been mapping Chinese tech giants overseas empires. Initially focused on the US, Chinese companies have since 2018 slowed down investing in the country, as tensions between the two superpowers rise. As we’ve written previously, companies including Alibaba and Tencent have instead sharpened their focus on the developing markets of India and Southeast Asia.
Africa is no different. Lifestyle services giant Meituan-Dianping, gaming behemoths Tencent and Netease, as well as Transsion have made big bets on African companies. Alibaba has taken a different approach by launching training programs for aspiring African entrepreneurs.
Meanwhile, big-ticket Chinese venture capital firms including IDG Capital, Sequoia China, and Gaorong Capital have sharpened their focus on Africa. Investors expect to see a boom in financial services on the continent as connectivity improves and under-served populations come online.
Africa is a huge market with massive potential. The continent boasts six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies. With a diverse mix of 1.3 billion people, its population is expected to surpass China’s by 2025.
To be sure, China tech’s footprint remains modest in Africa, but the trends point to a major shift. Chinese tech titans see opportunities and conditions similar to those that lifted themselves in China before the internet boom.
Like China in the early 2000s, Africa supports a massive population, an under-served market, and a growing pool of tech talent. As the demand for digital services has increased, dynamic tech hubs have sprung up in Nigeria, Egypt, Kenya, and South Africa.
In the past decade, some Chinese companies have seen massive success in Africa. While the US has pushed countries around the world to exclude Huawei from their telecommunications networks, African countries have welcomed the firm as they push to improve connectivity.
Huawei was instrumental in rolling out 4G rollout across Africa and is set to drive 5G adoption on the continent. Alongside Chinese rival ZTE, Huawei received preferential loans from the Chinese government to establish telecom infrastructure throughout Africa, found Iginio Gagliardone, a professor at the University of the Witwatersrand who has written extensively about the influence of China in Africa. The government loans enabled the two companies to expand their influence across the continent with little risk.
A few other firms bet the farm on Africa, like Transsion. Founded in Shenzhen, the phone maker’s primary markets are all in Africa. The company controlled more than 40% of the African smartphone market at the end of last year, according to the International Data Corporation (IDC). Transsion also holds nearly 70% of the feature phone market, IDC data shows. The company, which operates R&D centers in Nigeria and Kenya, went public on the Shanghai Stock Exchange’s Nasdaq-like Star Market last year.
Driven largely by the Chinese government, Chinese investments in Africa have historically focused on infrastructure projects. Chinese foreign direct investment in Africa reached $5.4 billion in 2018, up 30% from the year before, according to data from the China Africa Research Initiative at John Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies.
But things began to change that year. At the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in September 2018, Chinese President Xi Jinping encouraged Chinese companies to invest $10 billion in Africa over the following three years, pronouncing an important shift from public to private investment in Africa.
“China has demonstrated its readiness to invest in areas deemed by foreign investors and donors as too risky, not sufficiently profitable, or not high priorities in the aid agenda,” Gagliardone wrote in his book “China, Africa, and the Future of the Internet.”
Since 2018, Chinese companies have sharpened their focus on the continent, and 2019 saw record amounts of Chinese involvement in the continent’s tech sector.
Alibaba began its Africa expansion in 2017—the year founder Jack Ma made his first visit. The company believes that its experience in China prepares it to develop Africa. ”I found myself propelled twenty years back in time, to the time when Alibaba was founded,” Ma said after the trip.
During the visit, Ma launched a $10 million fund for young Africa entrepreneurs to bring their offline businesses online and pledged to take 200 young business people to China to learn from Alibaba.
He returned a year later when Rwanda became the first country to join Alibaba’s Electronic World Trade Platform (eWTP), which promises to make cross-border trade easier for small to medium enterprises.
Chilli and coffee farmers in Rwanda have used the platform to sell their products on Tmall, Alibaba’s business-to-consumer marketplace, while Ethiopia became the second African country to sign eWTP agreements late last year. It remains unclear how many companies are benefiting from the initiative.
Meanwhile, other tech giants have also increased their focus on Africa. In early 2019, Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi set up a business group to grab at sales on the continent in order to offset slowing growth at home. The move put Xiaomi at odds with well-established Chinese rivals rival Transsion and Huawei, which claimed a market share of nearly 10%.
Transsion had been able to avoid fierce competition from domestic rivals in its home market by focusing on Africa, but those companies were now also looking abroad for new sources of growth.
In 2015 Transsion launched music-streaming service Boomplay through a joint venture with Chinese gaming giant Netease. The service is primarily focused on the African market: 85% of its users come from Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, and Tanzania.
The company launched the service to make its phones more attractive to buyers and to boost revenue from non-hardware sales. The initiative has so far been a success. In April last year, Boomplay raised $20 million from Chinese investors including Maison Capital and Seas Capital.
Complementing the spread of China tech in Africa, Chinese investors have also increasingly sought out startups across Africa. These investors are looking to place their bets on Africans without bank accounts.
African startups raised a total of $2 billion in 2019, more than 70% than the year before, according to data from global investment firm Partech. While Chinese investments comprised only a small portion of that total, Africa has received a major boost in attention from Chinese investors.
Fintech services developed early in Africa. Ten years ago, fintech platforms in Africa were more developed than those in China, prior to the launch of Ant Group’s Alipay or Wechat’s Wechat Pay. “Mobile money,” which allows people to make payments, and deposit or withdraw money on even the most basic mobile phones, gained widespread adoption.
In 2017, Chinese-owned, Norway-based software company Opera pledged to invest $100 million in Africa’s digital economy. The company later launched super app Opay in Nigeria, which combined payments, food delivery, and ride-hailing services.
Opay was a handful of fintech beneficiaries from a boom in Chinese investment in Africa’s tech sector in 2019. The company closed two funding rounds last year, raising $170 million to help its expansion plans. Investors included some of the biggest Chinese names: Meituan, Gaorong Capital, Sequoia China, and IDG Capital.
“Opay will facilitate the people in Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Kenya, and other African countries with the best fintech ecosystem that Africa has ever seen,” Zhou Yahui, CEO of Opay and founder of Kunlun, said in a statement at the time.
But due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the company announced in July that it was suspending its non-fintech operations, including ride-hailing and food delivery service
Meanwhile, Africa-focused fintech platform Palmpay launched in Nigeria after a $40 million investment from Transsion and Netease. The investment also included a partnership with Transsion to pre-install the Palmpay app on 20 million of Transsion’s phones this year.
The focus on investing in fintech is driven by a broad-based effort to bring financial services to Africa’s unbanked. According to the World Bank, nearly two-thirds of sub-Saharan Africans do not have bank accounts. In 2019, fintech received the most venture funding out of any industry in Africa, according to Weetracker.
Ant Group has taken notice of Africa’s fintech revolution. Last year the company partnered with Silicon Valley- and Lagos-based startup Flutterwave to add Alipay as a payment method for Flutterwave’s 60,000 merchants.
In July, Ant Group partnered with South Africa mobile operator Vodacom to launch a payments app in the country. The two companies aim to tap the 11 million South Africans who don’t own bank accounts.
Africa represents an opportunity that Chinese tech firms caught onto early, and show no signs of paring back. Many of these same Chinese firms thrived after the internet boom in China and stand to leverage their knowledge to help spread digital products across Africa.
As the digital divide on the continent narrows, more people in Africa will adopt these services, and like in India and Southeast Asia, Chinese companies and investors won’t want to miss out. Their current push onto the continent is likely only the beginning.
]]>Despite what you may have heard, bike rental is not dead.
The great Chinese bike sharing bubble popped a long time ago. Like a horde of syphilitic conquistadors, some 80 startups (including two unicorns) charged into the jungle in search of a city of bike-share gold, challenging the dominance of the car and bringing mobs of bikes back to China’s major cities. Few ever emerged, and those that did are mostly known by new names.
They got greedy, fighting price wars and spending user deposits on operations, and it brought them down. Ofo, of the yellow bikes, collapsed in a blaze of lost deposits, with CEO Dai Wei placed on a consumption blacklist that prevented him from traveling by train or buying cars. The next two players, Mobike (in orange) and Bluegogo (blue), exited with sales to tech giants Meituan and Didi Chuxing.
But under the wing of deep-pocketed giants, share biking is very much alive. It’s not the Wild West anymore—the sidewalk-blocking piles of bikes are rare, prices are a little higher, and there are rules about parking—but in a major city there’s almost always a bike available. Could this be—wonders—a sustainable industry?
Bottom line: No one ever found El Dorado, but it looks like bike rental is close to breaking even. The three remaining dominant players—Ant Group-backed Hellobike, ride-hailing service Didi’s Qingju, and lifestyle services giant Meituan’s Meituan Bike—have survived the bust by raising prices and looking for ways to develop sustainable businesses.
It was 2016, and bike rental was booming. Startups piled into the market, and by the end of the year, nearly 30 companies had set up shop. Investors followed, and almost overnight, millions of bicycles appeared on sidewalks across China.
At its peak, 80 companies operated around China. In 2018 the industry was worth RMB 17.8 billion ($2.58 billion), up from RMB 1.2 billion in 2016, according to data from Equalocean. But the bubble popped as quickly as it grew.
Consolidation begins: Mounting regulation and costs started to take a toll, and companies began to drop like flies. Ofo, once the darling of the industry, saw its cash reserves dwindle amid mounting lawsuits and a run on deposits.
Now, just three companies dominate the sector—Hellobike, Didi’s Qingju (or Orange), and Meituan Bike.
Two of the three—Qingju and Meituan Bike—are run by companies with deep pockets. Hellobike is backed by Ant Group, the world’s largest fintech company. Their focus has shifted from hyperscaling to profitability.
Attempts at profit: For the first time in the industry’s history, companies are talking seriously about bike rental turning a profit. Hellobike, China’s biggest bike-rental firm, said in September (in Chinese) last year that it was profitable in 200 cities across China. The company claimed 400 million cumulative registrations as of July.
Varying approaches: Platforms have sought novel ways to eke out profits and reduce losses. Hellobike, Meituan, and Qingju charge riders who park bicycles in unpopular places extra to reduce the costs of collecting them. A slew of other fees also exist, including for bikes parked outside designated parking areas.
Appeasing the powers that be: With increasingly strict rules, navigating government regulations aimed at reducing bikes cluttering city walks has become increasingly important.
Increased confidence: As surviving companies learn from the mistakes of their predecessors, confidence among investors has shown signs of rebounding. In April, Didi’s Qingju reportedly raised a whopping $1 billion from Lenovo-backed investment firm Legend Capital and an unnamed international venture capital firm.
China’s bike rental saga is a familiar story. A new field opens up, pundits declare it to be the future, dozens of startups start and investors overheat the sector. Pretty soon, the fire runs out of oxygen and burns out. Finally, tech giants step in to create something modest and sustainable from the ashes.
]]>Revenue for Chinese search giant Baidu contracted 1% in the second quarter compared with the same year-ago period, with the company warning that the downward trend could continue in the second half of 2020.
Why it matters: Baidu narrowed a revenue decline from the first quarter, showing some signs of recovery after the Covid-19 outbreak in China.
Details: Baidu’s revenue reached RMB 26.03 billion ($3.69 billion) in the quarter ended June 30, down 1% from the RMB 26.33 billion it earned during the same period in 2019, the company announced on Thursday. Baidu previously forecasted sales of between RMB 25 billion and RMB 27.3 billion in Q2.
Context: Baidu has plowed billions into diversifying its offerings in search of additional revenue streams. It has focused this spending on artificial intelligence and cloud computing, while the company is exploring enterprise services for growth.
It wasn’t so long ago that China tech investment loved US startups. Now, the two tech markets feel like they’re on different planets.
Over the past week, US officials have announced plans to rid American networks of Chinese technology and digital services, and announced bans that could outlaw the use of short video platform Tiktok and popular messaging app Wechat in the US.
The move has taken tech tensions between the two companies to unprecedented levels, and placed additional pressure on Tiktok owner Bytedance to sell the short video platform’s US operations over national security concerns.
Expanding Empires is TechNode’s monthly data-driven newsletter looking at where and how Chinese tech majors are investing in up-and-comers around the world. Available to TechNode Squared members.
So far, the American offensive specifically targets two companies, but ripple effects are creating uncertainty over just how wide-ranging the ban could be—especially for Wechat’s owner Tencent, which holds a formidable portfolio of US investments.
So how do geopolitical tensions affect Chinese tech’s overseas investments? Pretty significantly, it turns out. In fact, the story of American measures to stifle Chinese influence in its home market starts long before July.
I scraped and analyzed public funding data to pinpoint deals by Chinese tech majors in the US. The numbers highlight a turning point in 2018, when the US sharpened its focus on companies like telecommunications giants Huawei and ZTE. Since then, Chinese investments in US startups have fallen off a cliff.
Tech giants like Alibaba, Tencent, and Baidu appear to have reversed their US investment strategies amid rising tensions between China and the US, as two superpowers tussle over the future of the companies that dominate the internet.
It started with a boom. After gaining a solid foothold in their home markets, Chinese tech giants started looking abroad for the next big thing.
In 2008, Tencent became the first Chinese tech giant to set its sights on the US, investing in big-ticket companies like electric vehicle maker Tesla and social media giant Snap.
The company has participated in 81 funding rounds for US startups since 2008. Its US investments peaked between 2014 and 2017, a period when it made three-quarters of its deals—62 in all.
In 2010, the same year that Google bowed out of China over concerns of censorship and cyber threats, e-commerce giant Alibaba made its first move into the US. The e-commerce giant has since taken part in 27 funding rounds for US companies. These rounds totaled more than $5.4 billion. Given how companies guard information about their investments, the data presents only the total value of each funding round rather than Alibaba’s individual contributions.
Meanwhile, Baidu made its first US investment in 2013. Though it has taken part in significantly fewer funding rounds than either Alibaba or Tencent, Baidu’s investment peak came in 2016, when it participated in rounds for lidar-maker Velodyne, as well as fintech companies Circle and Zestfinance.
Overall, Chinese venture funding in the US amounted to around $14 billion between 2013 and 2018, according to figures from the US-China Investment Project. Total investment spiked in 2018 at $4.7 billion, but otherwise plateaued between 2015 and 2019 at around $2.5 billion.
Everything changed after 2018. In 2016, Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent were involved in 22 deals in the US. In 2019, they took part in a paltry three investments.
The reason was almost certainly politics. As trade tensions between the world’s two largest economies flared, the US and Chinese tech sectors took most of the heat. Hostility grew and investments shrank.
Chinese investors that focused on US startups in previous years have sought distance from the sector. Tightening US regulations drove them away, while the prospect of bigger returns lured them to developing markets. New rules that give CFIUS extra power added another important reason for the decline.
In 2019, Tencent took part in just two funding rounds—one for social media news aggregator Reddit, and another for contacts manager Contacts+—a 90% decrease from its height of 23 deals in 2015, and a 70% year-on-year decline from 2018.
While Alibaba’s US portfolio isn’t as expansive as Tencent’s, the company participated in 26 deals between 2010 and 2017, including high-profile investments into companies like mobility platform Lyft and Snap. Since 2018, it has taken part in only one US funding round.
Alibaba’s pullback from the US preceded Tencent’s. Business concerns may have also played a role, as the company pivoted to Asia’s lucrative developing markets when growth began to stagnate in its home market of China. Still, US scrutiny of Chinese firms was already intensifying, and rising tensions undoubtedly played a role in Alibaba shifting away.
Even Baidu, which has far less at stake in the US given its smaller investment footprint, has pulled back from American investments. Just one of its 11 investments took place after 2018.
As the number of Chinese funding rounds in the US declines, so does the amount of investment coming from China. The US-China Investment Project estimates that Chinese venture funding in the US totaled $400 million in the first quarter, down from $640 million during the same period in 2019 and $1 billion in 2018. Of course, a global pandemic beginning in China also contributed to this fall.
This dropoff was “distinctively Chinese,” according to the US-China Investment Project’s report. Despite the decrease in Chinese investment, overall funding in US startups largely remained the same.
China’s tech giants have turned their eye to the developing markets. Firms including Alibaba and Tencent have increased their investments in the emerging markets of South and Southeast Asia. The two companies have divided up India’s tech scene without any overlap in their investments, while also making some big bets on promising tech companies in Southeast Asia.
A significant factor contributing to the dropoff in China tech investment is the increasingly strict regulatory environment. In late 2018, the US introduced new measures that increase scrutiny of foreign investments in American companies.
Dubbed the Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act (FIRRMA), the changes gave CFIUS, an inter-agency body tasked with identifying risks from foreign investments, more power to scrutinize investments into American firms.
FIRRMA came into effect amid fears that Chinese acquisitions of and investments into US companies were abetting technology transfers from the US to China, and having adverse effects on American companies and internet users.
Before the new rules, CFIUS typically reviewed deals only when a foreign investor took a controlling stake in a US company, focusing on deals involving sensitive technologies.
In early 2018, fintech giant Ant Financial found itself locking horns with CFIUS. The Alibaba-affiliated company had wanted to acquire American money transfer firm Moneygram, but was forced to withdraw from the deal after the regulatory committee rejected it over national security concerns.
The proposed $1.2 billion deal would have made 2018 an even bigger year for China-US investment flows, increasing total investment that year to nearly $6 billion, based on figures from the US-China Investment Project. That figure would have more than doubled the previous year’s total.
CFIUS has also blocked Chinese ownership of the LGBTQ dating app Grindr. The committee required Beijing Kunlun Technology, the app’s previous owner, to sell the app, citing national security concerns. Kunlun agreed to sell the app to San Vincente Acquisition in March.
FIRRMA gave CFIUS a mandate to review non-controlling investments in US companies that produce critical technology, critical infrastructure, or that collect US citizens’ personal data. Critical technologies can include anything from semiconductors to batteries.
Crucially, it also authorized the committee to target investors based on the country they are from.
“While specific countries are not singled out, FIRRMA allows CFIUS to potentially discriminate among foreign investors by country of origin in reviewing certain investment transactions,” the Congressional Research Service, a US Congress-affiliated think tank, wrote in a February report.
According to CFIUS’ annual report, only three potential investments in critical technology originated from China in 2019. But even if CFIUS is not rejecting deals, the dramatic drop in Chinese investment shows that Chinese tech companies don’t think it’s worth trying.
“The broad impacts suggest systemic headwinds to Chinese venture activity, reflecting tighter investment screening and a deterioration in investor sentiment as US-China tensions increase,” said the report by the US-China Investment Project.
Given the Trump administration’s latest move to shed Chinese technology from America’s digital networks, Chinese companies and investors will likely continue to be driven away by US politics.
]]>Electric vehicle (EV) startup Xpeng has raised an additional $300 million as part of the company’s Series C+, bringing the total amount raised in the round to $800 million.
Why it matters: The deal reflects growing optimism in China’s electric vehicle market after a disappointing second half of 2019. Sales of electric cars plummeted after China’s government cut purchase subsidies by around 50% in mid-2019.
Details: Based in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, Xpeng is raising an additional $300 million from new investors including the Qatar Investment Authority, the Middle Eastern nation’s sovereign wealth fund, Reuters reported, citing sources. E-commerce giant Alibaba also contributed to the expanded fundraising, according to CNBC.
Context: US EV maker Tesla has boosted investor sentiment in China’s EV sector, as a result of the company’s strong deliveries and an expected surge in profits.
Electric vehicle maker Li Auto raised $1.1 billion in its Nasdaq debut on Thursday after pricing above its expected range, becoming the second Chinese new energy vehicle company to list on an American bourse. The company’s share price closed up more than 40% after its first day of trading.
Why it matters: Winners are beginning to emerge in China’s electric vehicle market after a boom in the industry. Several automakers including rival startup Byton have failed to raise funds to hold them over in the aftermath of the Covid-19 outbreak.
Details: Li Auto began trading under the ticker “LI” on Thursday. The company priced 95 million American Depositary Shares at $11.5 per share, higher than the expected range of $8 to $10.
Context: US listings are proving to be popular among Chinese EV makers despite increasing scrutiny of Chinese companies in the US. Nio went public in New York in late 2018 while rival EV maker Xpeng is reportedly also pursuing a US IPO after confidentially filing in June, Chinese media reported.
The head of AI research at Bytedance is leaving the company as the tech giant faces intensifying international scrutiny of its popular short video app Tiktok, Reuters reported.
Why it matters: Bytedance has seen a slew of setbacks in its international operations as countries including the US and India look to limit its presence within their borders.
Details: Ma Wei-Ying will leave Bytedance this week, Reuters cited a source as saying. A replacement has not yet been made public.
Context: Bytedance is facing heightened pressure after the app was banned in India—the company’s largest international market—in late June and faces the possibility of similar measures in the US.
As Chinese tech companies push abroad, India has been a land of opportunity. But rising tensions between the two countries are starting to raise questions about the future of Chinese tech in India.
Much like China did in the early 2010s, India’s residents are rapidly turning to online services, creating fertile ground for ambitious startups to thrive. The country is also home to a vast, underserved market of often-rural consumers.
Chinese companies have taken notice, with investment in Indian startups surging to $4.6 billion in 2019, a twelvefold increase from 2016.
Expanding Empires is TechNode’s monthly data-driven newsletter looking at where and how Chinese tech majors are investing in up-and-comers around the world. Available to TechNode Squared members.
In the past five years, firms including short-video giant Bytedance, e-commerce firm Alibaba, social media behemoth Tencent, and smartphone maker Xiaomi have participated in funding rounds for Indian startups totaling more than $12.3 billion, according to my analysis of public data. These investments have helped to scale Indian unicorns like Paytm, Snapdeal, Swiggy, and Ola.
Now, however, these Chinese companies could be caught in the crossfire of a geopolitical battle. On June 29, Indian officials banned 59 Chinese apps over national security concerns—including apps made by companies that have been investing millions in the country’s startups.
India’s technology minister referred to the move as a “digital strike” against China. The ban came just two weeks after a deadly border clash between the two nations that left 20 Indian soldiers dead.
What is at stake for Chinese tech companies in India? This month, I’ve delved into the data to explore how intertwined India’s tech sector is with China’s. What has emerged is a story of a China tech proxy war, and investments that may come back to bite China’s biggest tech companies. Here’s what I found:
China’s investment in Indian startups has swelled in the past four years.
The reason is due in part to rising suspicion of Chinese capital in the US, traditionally a popular destination for these companies. As American startups became a less-popular proposition, Chinese tech firms looked instead to Asia’s emerging markets.
Now, India’s popularity comes with a price tag.
Apps produced by Bytedance, Alibaba, Tencent, and Xiaomi were among those banned by India’s government at the end of June.
Bytedance’s massively popular short-video platform TikTok and its India-focused social media platform Helo have been blacklisted. Meanwhile, around eight of Tencent’s apps have been banned, including the popular messaging app WeChat, which has more than a billion users around the world, and seven QQ apps, including QQ Music and Wechat predecessor QQ messenger.
In addition, Alibaba’s popular UC Browser and UC News apps, as well as Xiaomi’s Mi Call app have been outlawed.
Five years ago, India looked like a safe place for a Chinese company to invest and earn profits. That’s when Alibaba made the first move into India.
In 2015, the company invested in the Indian startup payments Paytm through its fintech affiliate Ant Financial.
This wasn’t Alibaba’s first overseas investment. However, it did represent an important shift for the company, moving its focus away from investing in the US in favor of the developing markets of India and Southeast Asia—a strategy that now defines its approach to investing abroad.
Tencent followed suit later that year, becoming one of several investors to take part in a $90 million funding round for the medtech startup Practo.
Five years later, the two companies have become China’s biggest investors in India. Alibaba and Ant Financial have taken part in 20 funding rounds for Indian companies. The combined value of these deals exceeds $5 billion.
Meanwhile, Tencent has participated in rounds totaling a combined $6.7 billion in India. Of the nearly 180 international rounds in which Tencent has taken part, 24 were in India.
Chinese firms accounted for 11.6% of the total funding to Indian startups in the last five years, according to Gateway House. Tencent and Alibaba alone make up a significant portion of this total, according to my analysis. The value of the rounds that Tencent and Alibaba participated in make up 96% of the total value of all rounds in which Chinese tech giants have taken part in India.
Through these investments, the companies appear to be dividing up India’s fintech and e-commerce sectors. On one side are the Alibaba-affiliated companies: Bigbasket, Paytm, and Snapdeal. On the other side stand the Tencent-invested firms: Swiggy, Khatabook, and Flipcart.
Alibaba had initially focused its attention on smaller bets on companies in mature markets, but they changed tack in 2015. In India, the company has set its sights on well-established companies central to its core business, the majority of which were Series C or above at the time of investment. Its strategy has paid off. Five of its investments in India have reached unicorn status.
Tencent has pursued a different strategy. The social media giant has taken more of a shotgun approach, investing in a wide array of industries from content and entertainment to online travel to digital security.
Aside from Alibaba and Tencent, several other Chinese tech firms have pushed into the subcontinent by expanding their services to Indian users and investing in the country’s startups.
With perhaps the largest physical presence out of all the Chinese tech giants, Xiaomi has seen its India revenue surge. The company holds the largest share of India’s smartphone market: nearly 30% as of mid-2019.
In the third quarter of that year, the company reported that one-third of its revenue came from its India operations. The country is so important to Xiaomi that they even have an India-focused smartphone brand, Poco, which it spun off earlier this year.
Since the beginning of June, Xiaomi has even begun sporting a “Made in India” section on its Indian website, claiming that 99% of all the phones it sells in the country are made there. The move is part of a 2014 plan by the Indian government to incentivize manufacturing within the country.
Aside from its own products, Xiaomi has also invested in several Indian startups, participating in eight funding rounds worth a total of $78 million.
These investments have predominantly focused on early-stage companies offering mobility and content and entertainment services. Investments in digital services make sense in a country with a rapidly growing internet population. Xiaomi describes itself as an internet company despite the fact that the majority of its revenue is derived from hardware.
Xiaomi has predominantly focused on India, with just one US-based startup in its portfolio, while a third of all international funding rounds in which Bytedance has participated involve Indian companies.
Bytedance’s investments come as the company has pushed its own services—most notably TikTok—in India. The content giant has invested $67.5 million in Dailyhunt, an Indian news aggregator.
But it’s Bytedance’s own apps that make it a big deal in India. The country is TikTok’s biggest market, boasting around 200 million monthly users. Bytedance also operates the Indian social media platform Helo, which had nearly 50 million monthly users last July, according to the company.
Rising tensions between China and India are threatening to bury Chinese companies’ early success on the subcontinent—and any future investments—in an unexpected geopolitical earthquake. India is taking steps to limit Chinese foreign direct investment in the country over concerns that the companies are state-owned.
Apart from blocking Chinese companies’ apps, India amended its foreign direct investment (FDI) rules earlier this year. The amended rules require any company from a bordering nation to get permission from the government before investing in an Indian company. The rules had previously only applied to Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Changes to India’s FDI laws are likely to have a “detrimental effect” on India’s startup ecosystem, according to Aurojyoti Bose, lead analyst at Globaldata. “Chinese companies have traditionally been the lead investors in some of the key startups in India, which also enabled these startups to scale up,” said Bose.
The new rules, coupled with tensions on the border and rising nationalism within the country, appear to have motivated the government’s move to ban the 59 apps.
The app ban, as well as the changes to investment laws, are raising questions about the future of Chinese tech in India. US companies already appear to be taking advantage of this. This week, Google announced that it would invest $10 billion in India, including equity investments, over the next five to seven years.
With no ceasefire in sight, Chinese companies with their eyes on India may start looking elsewhere for their next big investment.
]]>One of China’s leading disease control experts has said that that AI could play a larger role in managing future outbreaks in China, particularly in allocating scarce medical resources and identifying early signs of an epidemic.
Why it matters: At the height of the Covid-19 outbreak in China, hospitals around the country faced medical equipment shortages. Medical institutions appealed to the public for donations to fill the gaps left by the government.
Details: China should use big data to build an AI-based early warning system that can identify threats like Covid-19, Zhang Wenhong, director of the infectious disease department at Shanghai’s Huashan Hospital, said at the opening of the World Artificial Intelligence Conference on Thursday.
Context: Zhang became a popular figure during the Covid-19 outbreak in China, leading Shanghai’s offensive against the disease and providing guidance to cities around the country.
China has spent much of this year trying using surveillance tools to figure out where people are. The outbreak of a major epidemic challenged the government to track people’s movements. Local governments need to know who’s arriving on trains from epidemic hotspots, and, inside cities, who has been exposed to super-spreader events like the one at Beijing’s Xinfadi market.
The country has millions of surveillance cameras, and its companies are world leaders in face recognition. But this technology has been missing in action in China’s contact tracing efforts, while companies like Sensetime and Hikvision have seen their revenues hit during the pandemic.The video cameras that line China’s streets seem to have played no role in contact tracing. Systems to monitor social media turned out to be ineffective. Covid-19 simply ran circles around China’s surveillance apparatus.
Bottom line: China has been building a camera and face recognition-based surveillance system for years and this should have been its time to shine. Instead, star surveillance companies have seen revenue decline as contracts are delayed or canceled. As a new generation of infection tracking systems are rolled out, authorities are relying on a totally different model pioneered by consumer-oriented tech giants Tencent and Alibaba.
Get one client, make it big: International media love to tell stories of China’s facial recognition-driven panopticon. As overblown as they might be at times, they’re kind of true—and they’ve bred a huge market for facial recognition and surveillance equipment companies.
A bad year: We would have expected surveillance and face recognition to hold up as Covid brought China’s economy to a halt, especially as contact tracing proved key to reopening. But the industry proved anything but immune.
What explains the losses? It’s not clear. A plateau in government contracts and US-led limits on exports probably both contributed. The biggest contributor to losses was likely falling public spending in the first few months of the year. After years of rapid growth, China’s investments in video surveillance have largely remained flat in 2020 in spite of the massive health crisis in the country.
Aside from a single large investment in the southern island province of Hainan, in the first half of 2020, proposed government investments in video surveillance projects around China amounted to RMB 2.7 billion in nearly 160 tenders, up marginally from RMB 2.5 billion in 2019, according to a TechNode analysis of public procurement data.
Bright spots: Two Chinese provinces stood out in procurement data as exceptions to the trend of falling surveillance contracts: Hebei, the province that surrounds Beijing, and the southern island of Hainan both bucked the trend.
The dog that didn’t bark: The most surprising thing about the video surveillance industry in 2020 is what it didn’t do. As Covid-19 spread across China, the government went into crisis mode, launching efforts to track and control mobility. Despite tens of millions of cameras deployed across the country, officials turned to pen and paper to track where people were going and where they had been.
Thermal cameras: Surveillance companies in China ended up deploying thermal surveillance systems in public areas. These platforms were touted to be able to measure the temperatures of dozens of people at once.
A new system emerges: As China re-opened, it built a new surveillance system to track where people went. Instead of turning to the camera companies, these contracts went to Alibaba and Tencent.
READ MORE: How China is using QR code apps to contain Covid-19
Companies like Hikvision and Dahua seem determined not to let the same opportunities pass them by a second time. After the virus started taking hold internationally, the two companies began marketing epidemic surveillance products abroad.
Dahua has reportedly sold thermal imaging cameras to Amazon to measure its employees’ temperatures. Sensetime has also narrowed in on temperature screening, deploying its technology at the entrances to airports and subway stations in China. Meanwhile, Hikvision’s international website is mostly focused on products aimed at adapting to the “new normal,” such as handheld thermal cameras and other thermographic devices
Nevertheless, the failure to effectively contribute to contract tracing raises questions about the industry. If they can’t be deployed to aid in a time of crisis, what are these companies selling, and does it actually work?
]]>It all started in 2008. That year, social media giant Tencent struck a deal to invest in Outspark, a small US-based gaming company.
It represented more than just a funding round. The deal was the tech giant’s first foray into investments outside China, marking the beginning of its journey to become the biggest gaming firm in the world.
The investment came three years before Tencent released WeChat (now one of the most widely used messaging platforms in the world), before it acquired Riot Games, and before the Chinese company was a household name.
Expanding Empires is TechNode’s monthly data-driven newsletter looking at where and how Chinese tech majors are investing in up-and-comers around the world. Available to TechNode Squared members.
Now, 12 years after Outspark’s $11 million Series B, Tencent has funded more than 140 companies outside China. These investments have been part of funding rounds worth a total of $46 billion, a total that includes other investors. Tencent has driven a set of companies that includes Uber, Gojek, and the studio behind popular mobile game “Clash of Clans.”
The idea for this newsletter came from a simple question we asked late last year: Where does Tencent put its money?
We thought finding the answer would be a matter of simply doing a search on Crunchbase. Two days of data cleaning and analysis later, we realized how little we knew. How many companies has Tencent taken a stake in? And in which industries? Good data just wasn’t available. So we decided to dig a little deeper.
I’ve spent the past few weeks scraping and analyzing the data in attempting to gain a more granular understanding of how the company operates around the globe. The data is still incomplete, because in most cases, Tencent’s individual contribution in each round is a closely guarded secret. Moreover, the terms of dozens of deals have not been made public, a common practice in the tech industry.
But what has emerged is a picture of a firm with global ambitions that has fashioned itself into something of a VC, taking stakes in companies unrelated to its core offering. I’ve plotted the data and here’s what I found:
Tencent’s international portfolio dwarfs that of rival tech giant Alibaba—the focus of the last edition of this newsletter. According to my analysis, the number of companies outside China that Tencent has invested in is more than double that of Alibaba.
While gaming is one of Tencent’s most important businesses, the company has spread its bets across a range of verticals. Some have connections to Tencent products, while others appear to be simply companies it believes in.
Tencent invests in a vast array of companies, from those that it pushes billions into, to smaller startups that it deems worthy of a few million dollars.
Mobility is a big-ticket item for Tencent, totaling more than $18 billion in investment rounds, or around 40% of the value of all global rounds in which Tencent has taken part.
But the company looks a lot like a VC. It has made dozens of bets on small, early-stage startups that focus on artificial intelligence, biotech, security, and aerospace.
Tencent’s approach is vastly different than Alibaba’s. While the Chinese e-commerce giant tends to focus on investments that could aid its new retail push, Tencent focuses more on returns.
Pre-Series C startups account for around 40% of all the rounds Tencent has participated in. (Companies up to Series B are widely defined as being early-stage.) The amount of money the company has contributed to these startups makes up just 6% of the total value of the rounds the company has taken part in.
Fifteen of these companies are gaming studios, while 12 focus on fintech. Of all startups from Seed to Series H, the vast majority were Series A or Series A+.
Tencent has investments on every continent except Antarctica. Of the country’s more than 900 investments, around 180 are outside China. The company has injected money into several focus industries around the world. In North America and Southeast Asia, the focus is mobility. In these two regions, Tencent has spent billions of dollars on companies including Uber, Tesla, and Gojek.
In Africa, Australia, and South America, Tencent has been involved in high-value investments in fintech. In India, e-commerce comes out on top, albeit by a small margin.
Meanwhile, in Europe, the company has spent the most on gaming firms, including what was—at the time—the largest investment figure in gaming history.
According to the data, Tencent has shown little interest in the Middle East, particularly Israel, which has become a major focus of Chinese tech companies. The one investment we identified in the region was in Phytech, an Israeli firm that provides IoT and analytics services to farmers.
Another trend not represented in our charts: In more mature markets such as the US, Tencent makes lots of small bets in early-stage companies. In immature markets, it makes bigger bets—less frequently—on later-stage companies.
Tencent has attempted to dominate the global gaming industries through acquisitions and investments. Early on, its typical approach was to stay south of a billion dollars. It bought Riot Games for $400 million, its investment in Epic Games cost $330 million, and South Korea-based CJ Games’ venture round amounted to $500 million.
But in 2016, something changed. Tencent spent $8.6 billion on the Finnish gaming studio behind “Clash of Clans.” It stands out as their largest investment in a gaming company, and probably the largest it has made outside China. The only possible larger investment is Uber’s $9 billion fundraise in late 2017, in which Tencent took an undisclosed share.
Founded in 2010, Finland-based gaming studio Supercell started off developing browser games, but quickly made the switch to mobile. In 2012, the company released “Clash of Clans“ and “Hay Day”—both of which became hits in Apple’s App Store and Google’s Play Store. Clash of Clans has remained one of the top-grossing games in the App Store.
Supercell became one of Tencent’s largest-ever investments—made through a Luxembourg-based consortium, of which Tencent owned 50%. The Chinese tech giant went on to take a controlling stake in the consortium in 2019.
The acquisition was the largest in gaming history—only Activision Blizzard’s $5.9 billion buyout of “Candy Crush” developer King came close. For Tencent, Supercell was a means to become a mobile-first gaming company abroad, which executives had previously highlighted as an area of importance as gaming shifted to handheld devices.
Supercell also allowed Tencent to drastically scale its international presence. Because “Clash of Clans” was hugely popular outside China, buying Supercell was a way to quickly increase Tencent’s international market share.
For the most part, the values of Tencent’s gaming acquisitions were not disclosed. Details of the deals were shared in just five cases.
In the past 12 years, Tencent has invested in 11 gaming companies over 43 funding rounds. The value of these rounds total $11.6 billion, excluding those in which the terms were not disclosed.
As Covid-19 began spreading across China in early 2020, the government took measures to limit the impact of the virus. Authorities shut down entire cities, bringing the economy to a halt.
According to the data, however, Tencent kept investing. The company took part in an average of four funding rounds per month during the first half of the year. Thus far, that amounts to 17 investments between January and June. During the same period in 2019, that number was 12.
At this rate, Tencent could outpace its 2015 high of 30 global investments.
Tencent’s sustained investments in the age of Covid-19 set the company apart from other VC investors, who had already been cutting back their investments before the pandemic hit. Tencent also stands alone among its peers, making smaller bets on lots of companies in various sectors in the pursuit of return on its investments.
If this trend continues, Tencent could keep the fire burning through China’s VC “ice age” and a slowdown in investments abroad, giving it more influence over global tech and positioning it for a post-Covid-19 world.
]]>Search giant Baidu has released a toolkit for machine learning that allowing researchers to build and train quantum neural networks.
Why it matters: Tech giants around the globe have increased their focus on quantum computing. Baidu set up its Institute for Quantum Computing in March 2018.
Details: Baidu’s Paddle Quantum, built on top of the company’s deep learning platform Paddlepaddle, consists of a set of machine learning toolkits, including quantum development tools, a quantum chemistry library, and a set of features for optimization.
“From now on, researchers in the quantum field can use Paddle Quantum to develop quantum artificial intelligence, and our deep learning enthusiasts have a shortcut to learning quantum computing.”
—Duan Runyao, director of Baidu’s Quantum Computing Institute
Context: As development of traditional computers reaches its peak, researchers are looking to quantum computing to drive the next wave of artificial intelligence. The technology is based on quantum mechanics and is still in its infancy.
In its latest rebuke against China, the United States said on Friday that it will add nearly three dozen Chinese companies and institutions to a trade blacklist over their alleged involvement in human rights abuses or their ties to the country’s military.
Why it matters: The move comes as lawmakers and political advisors meet in Beijing for the Two Sessions, one of the most important annual events on China’s political calendar.
Details: The US Department of Commerce added nine companies and institutions to the trade ban for their alleged complicity in human rights abuses in China’s northwestern Uighur Autonomous Region. Of these, seven companies have were added to the so-called “Entity List” for “enabling China’s high-technology surveillance” program.
Context: The move marks Washington’s latest offensive against Chinese tech companies in an ongoing spat between China and the US.
Starting today, we will be delivering to you one exclusive thematic newsletter a week. Our new in-focus series will feature in-depth reporting on the latest developments in key areas:
This week, we start with Expanding Empires, a data-driven, in-depth look at where and how companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and Meituan are investing in up-and-comers around the world.
What do the global empires of China’s tech giants look like? It’s a harder question than you might think.
I’ve been wondering about this since last year, when we took a look at Tencent’s overseas investments. Trying to map out the company’s web of funding rounds and acquisitions, we realized this simple question is actually really hard to answer.
Startup investing is an opaque world—while private companies usually announce the names of participants in their fundraising, no one knows how much the players put in. There’s sources like Crunchbase that compile this data, but getting a full picture is not easy.
That’s why we’re launching a new reporting project: Expanding empires, a monthly newsletter about our efforts to map the global profiles of China’s biggest investors.
I’ve been building web spiders to gather data, analyzing it, and then visualizing the results. Our first focus: Alibaba.
Since 2010, the company, along with its fintech affiliate Ant Financial, have participated in global funding rounds for 66 companies. These funding rounds raised a total of $20 billion and helped drive the success of household names like Magic Leap, Lazada, and Zomato.
So where is Alibaba putting its money? What does its empire look like?
I scraped information about hundreds of Alibaba deals from corporate data platforms, and cross-referenced it with news accounts to identify the 66 overseas companies, revealing an evolving narrative that tells the story of a drastic shift in the company’s overseas strategy.
Corporate giants jealously guard information about their investments in order to avoid tipping off their rivals. As a result, the data is incomplete and presents only the total value of each funding round rather than Alibaba’s individual contributions.
In 10 years, Alibaba went from having no international footprint to making investments around the globe with more frequency and value. In its early days, the company went big on US investments. But later, it pivoted sharply to India and Southeast Asia, where it has placed big bets on well-established companies in developing markets.
In 2010, Alibaba made its first big deal outside China, according to the data I collected.
The company was no stranger to bets on up-and-coming companies, but it had stayed close to home.
In China, it had already participated in funding rounds totaling around RMB 435 million (about $61 million at current exchange rates), investing in companies from appliance giant Haier to courier firm Best Logistics. At the time, Alibaba had been listed in Hong Kong for three years and was operating e-commerce platforms serving millions of people in China. The company’s international footprint, however, was still small.
But this was starting to change. In 2010, Alibaba launched a $100 million investment plan for its global online retail business AliExpress. Under the plan, Alibaba acquired US e-commerce software provider Vendio for an undisclosed amount—the Chinese company’s first major investment in the US.
The deal was a watershed moment for Alibaba, representing a significant advance in its push abroad.
For the five years after its first US acquisition, Alibaba had its eyes trained on American companies. Around 90% of the 17 investment rounds the company took part in between 2010 and mid-2015 involved US firms, according to TechNode’s analysis.
During this time, Alibaba twice invested in ride-hailing platform Lyft, and once in social media giant Snap, both of which were already well established. These three deals totaled $4.5 billion. The company focused mostly on later-stage startups, the majority of which were Series C and above.
Unsurprisingly, a lot of the companies Alibaba invested in operated e-commerce businesses. Alibaba took stakes in companies like 1stdibs and Shoprunner, and Jet.com and Zuily. But many of its investments also focused on industries far from the realm of online shopping.
Alibaba bet on industries that would eventually come to complement its new retail push, as well as those that would later inform features on its massive online marketplace Taobao.
The company invested heavily in augmented and virtual reality technologies, and added to a portfolio of social media and messaging companies, an area where it had already fallen behind in China.
But from mid-2015 onwards, the company went through a drastic shift, broadening its view beyond investments in the US. Instead of looking across the Pacific for opportunities, it began searching closer to home.
While Alibaba had its eye on the US market, the company itself went through a series of fundamental changes. In 2012, the world’s largest online marketplace delisted from the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
“Just as the IPO was a starting point for Alibaba.com and not the finish line, [the] privatization is not the end but rather a new beginning,” Jack Ma wrote in a letter to employees early that year.
He was right. Just two years later the company went public on the New York Stock Exchange. At the time, it was the largest IPO in US history.
But the year following its New York IPO was disappointing. The company was plagued by slowed growth, fierce competition, and a flagging Chinese economy. Alibaba’s share price plummeted by around 40% from a post-IPO high of $115 in the year following its listing as consumer spending slowed at home. At the end of 2015, the company’s total annual sales growth fell to its lowest point in three years. The company began looking for ways to boost its bottom line.
Alibaba began investing in companies with more frequency. Between 2010 and mid-2015, the Chinese e-commerce giant had participated in 17 investment rounds. It took just a year from June 2015 to mid-2016 for the company to reach the same number.
But as it ramped up deal-making, the company was turning from the US to the emerging markets of Asia.
Between 2010 and 2015 Alibaba participated in 17 US-based rounds. In the last three years, from 2017 to 2020, that number dropped to just five. Meanwhile, the company has participated in 19 rounds in India and eight in Southeast Asia (SEA).
Alibaba clearly saw potential for growth in these two regions. Both India and SEA have experienced an explosion of startup founding. In the initial stage of the boom, these areas were similar to China in the early 2000s, with massive populations, underserved markets, and growing pools of tech talent.
It was fertile ground for Alibaba.
The company’s first Indian investment came in August 2015. Unsurprisingly, it was an e-commerce company much like Alibaba’s Tmall. The firm, Snapdeal, was founded in February 2010 and has risen through the ranks to become one of India’s largest e-commerce companies.
Alibaba then went on to invest in a slew of other Indian companies. These included fintech giant Paytm, e-commerce platform Paytm Mall, grocery delivery business Bigbasket, and restaurant aggregator and food delivery platform Zomato.
Alibaba’s bets paid off. At least five of the companies it plowed money into have reached unicorn status. Paytm and e-commerce company Paytm Mall have collectively raised around $3.6 billion in rounds in which Alibaba and Ant Financial participated. Paytm is now worth more than $16 billion.
Alibaba’s most frequent Indian investments focus on e-commerce and food delivery. The company has invested in both Zomato and Bigbasket five times. Bigbasket’s Alibaba-backed rounds have landed the company $650 million.
An e-commerce company is only as strong as its logistics network. Alibaba knew this. So it entered Southeast Asia through Singapore’s publicly-listed postal service.
In 2014, the Chinese e-commerce giant invested nearly $250 million in Singpost. A year later, it followed up with a $148 million cash injection.
Then, it bought one of SEA’s biggest e-commerce companies.
Lazada was founded in 2012 by German entrepreneur Max Bittner with backing from Rocket Internet. In four years, it became the biggest e-commerce company in SEA.
Alibaba acquired a controlling stake in the Singapore-headquartered company in 2016. It was Alibaba’s biggest overseas deal. It followed up a year later with another $1 billion investment, upping its stake from 51% to 83%. Then, in 2018, it plowed in another $2 billion.
Lazada is now Alibaba’s de facto representative in SEA. The company currently has operations in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
Alibaba is attempting to duplicate its success in China, applying what it has learned to new markets. At the time of its last investment, the company said that SEA is a “key part” of its global growth strategy.
But Alibaba didn’t stop there. The e-commerce giant and Ant Financial have participated in rounds worth at least $6.75 billion in the region, though, like in most regions, the value of several funding rounds was not disclosed.
Alibaba also counts Tokopedia, an e-commerce unicorn from Indonesia, as part of its family. The Chinese tech giant has participated in rounds worth $2.2 billion in the Southeast Asian company.
With billions spent on dozens of companies in its portfolio, Alibaba has become a major player in the world of startup funding. But unlike peer Tencent, the company doesn’t appear to have aspirations to become a global venture capital firm.
My analysis reveals a simple investment strategy: Alibaba invests in companies to help its mission of global e-commerce conquest. While it primarily focuses on investments in e-commerce, it also branches out into companies that support the industry, including online payment platforms.
The company has mostly abandoned the US, which is dominated by Amazon, in favor of markets it could win yet. Alibaba is betting big on SEA, home to Lazada—its biggest investment yet.
With Lazada, the company has bought a major presence in SEA. But reporting suggests that integrating it into the Ali empire has been a challenge.
]]>Sensetime, one of China’s highest-profile artificial intelligence startups, is looking to raise $1 billion after seeing wider adoption of the company’s technology during the coronavirus pandemic.
Why it matters: Fresh funding for Sensetime could signal that investors are regaining confidence after the Covid-19 outbreak in China. Money has been scarce for China’s tech startups in the wake of the epidemic.
Details: The $1 billion investment could give Sensetime a valuation of at least $9.5 billion, up from $7.7 billion at the end of 2018, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: Nevertheless, China’s biggest AI companies have faced increased pressure since several firms were placed on the US Entity list in October.
Chinese electric vehicle startup Xpeng has never been shy about its Tesla fandom.
“One of the reasons Xpeng was founded was because Elon Musk made Tesla’s patents available. It was so exciting,” He Xiaopeng, the company’s CEO, told Quartz in 2018. These words would return to haunt him.
Back in June of 2014, Tesla invited competitors to learn from its work on EVs by open-sourcing approximately 200 of its patents. In a blog post, Elon Musk wrote that he hoped a “common, rapidly-evolving technology platform” would encourage more companies to make electric cars—and that patent protections often “stifle progress.”
This story originally appeared on Drive I/O, an exclusive newsletter delivering deep analysis of electric and autonomous vehicles. Normally, it’s only for members, but we’re making it free as a preview. Sign up here to get every issue.
Xpeng founder Henry Xia took Musk up on his offer. That same month, he and two friends started their own autoworks in Guangzhou.
Today, Tesla’s attitude has changed. It argues that Xpeng crossed the line from imitation to theft. Tesla is suing its former employee Cao Guangzhi, alleging that the engineer misappropriated code for its Autopilot driving assistance function before leaving to take a job at Xmotors, Xpeng’s US-based sister company. At stake is Xpeng’s reputation, the limits of competition, and the ability of Chinese companies to hire leading engineers from Silicon Valley.
As TechNode wrote last week, Tesla is using the case against a former employee to justify a broad hunt through a competitor’s files to find proof of its IP theft suspicions.
In 2014, Musk wrote that gasoline-fueled vehicles were the company’s main competitors, not rival EV companies.
Neither Xpeng nor Xmotors has been named in the lawsuit, but Xmotors has been listed as a third party in the proceedings. The company has argued that Tesla’s moves are aimed at “bullying and disrupting” it.
Tesla has asked a San Francisco court to allow it access to its competitor’s entire repository of autonomous driving code and clones of its executives’ hard drives—including those of He, its CEO. A hearing on the matter was due to take place on May 7 in a San Francisco federal court, but has been delayed until May 28.
If Tesla wins its motion, Xpeng will have to hand over much of its most sensitive information. Even if Tesla ultimately loses the lawsuit, it would send a message that engineers who switch jobs to Chinese employers are automatically suspected, which could chill recruiting for years.
How did it get so bad?
TechNode reviewed public court documents, spoke to industry insiders, interviewed Chinese lawyers about the case, and attempted to reach Cao’s friends. What emerged was the story of a tragic relationship—a group of Chinese EV enthusiasts who loved Tesla so much they tried to become it, and an American company that went from nurturing competitors to accusing them of theft.
Tesla and Cao’s attorneys did not respond to TechNode’s requests for comment.
To compete in self-driving technology, Xpeng began recruiting engineers from top Silicon Valley companies, including Tesla and Apple, in 2017. For years, Tesla engineers have been sought after as some of the most capable leaders in the future of driverless mobility. These employees have been chased by US tech companies hungry for self-driving talent, as well as by Chinese tech firms with US operations.
When Xpeng hired Gu Junli, a young engineering manager from Tesla, they made her vice president of autonomous driving. The promotion allowed Gu to jump three ranks up from her previous job—equivalent to 10 years in the career of a typical engineer. Xpeng also issued a press release boasting that she was a “leading figure” in Tesla’s machine-learning technology.
But Gu’s Tesla resume did not automatically lead to success. One year after joining the company, Chinese media reported, she was missing her targets. Two persons close to Xpeng told TechNode she was just too inexperienced to build a team that could compete with the giants in a field like self-driving.
In December 2018, Xpeng replaced Gu as head of the team with a hire from Qualcomm, Wu Xinzhou. It was Wu who would later recruit Cao from Tesla.
Gu was given another job as a leader for development of “advanced” technologies, but was later sidelined. She left the company in March.
In 2018, Xpeng launched its first production vehicle, the G3. At the time of launch, the vehicle had a range of around 350 kilometers and shipped with driver assistance features. Observers noticed several similarities between the G3 and Tesla’s Model X and Model S—from the front profile of the car to the interior dash design.
This influence came as no surprise, given how open Xpeng had been about where it had drawn its inspiration.
Xpeng had a lot in common with the Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi, one of the company’s recent investors. When Xiaomi began operating, it took many of its cues from Apple—so much so that it was often called an Apple clone. The company adopted the same minimalist aesthetic as its US counterpart, but quickly began developing its own signature line of devices, from smart home equipment to computers, clothing, and cookware.
But copying an idea is not against the law. “The reason Apple won’t sue Xiaomi is that, while their products look similar, they don’t necessarily constitute copyright infringement,” Fang Chaoqiang, a lawyer at Beijing-based Yingke Law Firm, told TechNode.
Xiaomi is the poster child for an argument that critics of IP law have made for years—if the Chinese company had not been able to learn from Apple, dozens of innovative products would never have come on the market.
If Tesla took issue with the G3’s similarities to its own vehicles at the time of launch, it didn’t say much. In Musk’s 2014 patent blog post, he wrote that manufacturers of gasoline-fueled vehicles were the company’s main competitors, not rival EV companies. Indeed, the 16,608 vehicles Xpeng shipped in 2019 were a drop in the ocean compared to Tesla’s sales.
But after US-based Xpeng engineer Zhang Xiaolang was arrested by the FBI for stealing Apple IP while switching jobs in July 2018, rumors simmered that the Chinese company was cheating to catch up. Zhang was arrested on July 7, 2018, after Apple accused him of downloading sensitive information before he resigned to take a job with Xmotors in China.
Xpeng leaders deny that they encouraged Zhang to misappropriate Apple’s IP. The company added that there is no evidence Zhang transferred sensitive information from Apple to Xpeng, and that the engineer’s contract has been terminated.
The fallout for Xpeng’s reputation was immediate. Now, the company faces challenges in hiring talent, as US-based Chinese engineers have reportedly distanced themselves from the company.
In the 29 reviews about Xmotors to be found on job search website Glassdoor, three employees addressed concerns that their career prospects might be affected by these lawsuits, since “no one wants to hire someone from a company with all the public news about FBI investigation.”
An Xpeng spokesperson told TechNode that the company has not had trouble hiring new engineers in the US or China.
Cao, then an engineer at Tesla, condemned Zhang, the former Apple employee, in text messages that have since become public in the course of the lawsuit. Zhang’s case would cause a “bad impression on us Chinese,” he said, according to translated message transcripts.
When Wu Xinzhou, Xpeng’s new self-driving team leader, interviewed Cao about a job as “head of perception” in late 2018, the Tesla employee was concerned about how the job switch would look. Cao later told the court that Wu had soothed his worries by saying Xpeng “did not get involved at all” in Zhang’s actions.
Cao was a high-flying computer vision expert and a natural fit for the perception job. With both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in electrical engineering from Zhejiang University—one of China’s top schools, which houses an entire startup accelerator in an ultramodern egg-shaped building at the center of campus—and a Ph.D. from Purdue University, he’d worked on medical applications of computer vision at GE and Apple before working at Tesla.
Cao joined Xpeng in January 2019.
Just two months later, he was in court.
Xpeng’s work on autonomous driving had begun long before Cao joined them. The company was developing its driver assistance technology as far back as 2015, three years before its first mass-produced vehicle was released. Level 2.5 autonomous driving capabilities were included in the G3 upon delivery in early 2019. Xpilot includes assisted lane changing, cruise control, lane centering, and automatic speed limitations.
But in December 2019, Musk aired suspicions on Twitter that Xpeng was copying Tesla’s code. When a Twitter user with the moniker “The Cyber Pope of Muskanity” suggested that Xpeng had stolen Tesla’s software, Musk replied, “That’s certainly our impression.”
When Cao left Tesla in January 2019, the company suspected another engineer, surnamed Zhang. In addition to a shared nationality, both engineers had previously worked at Apple—though Cao has testified that they worked in separate divisions located at different buildings and campuses.
When Tesla found out that Cao had copied files to a personal computer, they decided that he had taken the code for his new employer. In March 2019, the company filed a suit against Cao, formally accusing him of misappropriating code by copying it to his personal iCloud account.
Tesla is trying to paint Xpeng as a repeat offender that poached engineers in order to gain access to IP, said a Chinese lawyer who spoke to TechNode under the condition of anonymity. Successfully linking the cases could have serious reputational implications for Xpeng.
Tesla admits that it can’t prove the theft.
Unlike smartphone design, in the world of self-driving software, it’s difficult to tell if someone has copied your product without actually getting your hands on the code. Tesla claims, in essence, that the fact that Cao had the code when he left Tesla is so suspicious that they should be allowed to rifle through Xpeng’s files in an effort to prove that the Chinese company used it.
As tech giants turn into corporate behemoths, they’ve taken a more possessive attitude to their employees.
Tesla’s case is built heavily on parallels between Cao and Zhang, but the company argues that its document requests will allow it to find proof. Cao has admitted to downloading files to a personal computer, but claims it was common practice at the company.
Other evidence submitted by Tesla is weaker. For example, an edited translation of Cao’s text message exchange about the Zhang case made it appear that Cao was speculating about how much money Zhang had gotten from Xpeng—when in fact this message was sent by his friend. Cao had responded by condemning Zhang’s actions.
Tesla’s case against Cao and the US authorities’ move to indict Zhang are two independent lawsuits, at least for now, said Lin Hang, a lawyer at Guangzhou-based F&P Law Firm. There are different parties involved in each case; moreover, Cao’s is a civil case, while Zhang’s is criminal. Xmotors is a third party in both.
Lin questioned the grounds of demonstrating a pattern of misconduct by Xmotors in its operations and recruiting. “You can’t just say C stole from D because A allegedly stole from B,” he said.
Another counsel, who wished to remain anonymous, was pessimistic about Xpeng’s chances, as the US has increasingly treated all Chinese companies as potential IP thieves. Tesla’s move against Xpeng may trigger more US tech companies targeting Chinese competitors for intellectual property theft, he said.
Whether he wins or loses, Cao’s life has been permanently changed. Xpeng placed him on administrative leave “until further notice” in March 2019, when the investigation began. His position has since been filled by a subsequent hire. The damage to his reputation will likely last much longer.
In 2014, Musk wrote that Tesla’s leadership was defined by its ability to “attract and motivate the world’s most talented engineers.” Nowadays, he’s less willing to compete for talent.
In its complaint against Cao, Tesla cited Xpeng’s pursuit of its engineers as part of a pattern of “copying,” writing that “at least five former Tesla Autopilot team members including Cao have gone to work for Xmotors.” Xpeng, and other Chinese EV startups, are known in the industry for recruiting Chinese employees from US tech giants with highly competitive salaries and stock option plans.
If Tesla wins its suit, it could have broad effects on the market for tech talent, scaring off engineers who had been considering working for Chinese companies.
Hiring away a rival’s staff is a normal part of competition, and Silicon Valley was built on disloyal employees. In the US, California is the only state that bans non-compete agreement—contracts are common throughout the rest of the US—and this fact is often credited with spurring the state’s culture of entrepreneurship.
Nevertheless, as tech giants turn into corporate behemoths, they’ve taken a more possessive attitude in regard to their employees—and the US’s Department of Justice (DOJ) has taken notice. In 2010, the DOJ alleged that companies including Apple, Adobe, Intel, and Google had made a deal not to recruit each other’s employees, limiting competition in the labor market and holding down salaries for coding talent. The measures effectively barred rivals from reaching out to potential employees at competing companies to offer them new positions.
In 2011, the companies settled with the DOJ, promising to end the practice. Subsequently, in 2015, they agreed to pay $415 million to settle a related class-action lawsuit in order to compensate around 64,000 employees.
While tech firms can’t use non-compete agreements to retain their employees, if Chinese engineers who start jobs at rival companies face probes or life-altering lawsuits, they are effectively bound by fear of repercussions from moving to better jobs.
For most consumers, an Xpeng is still just a cheaper version of a Tesla. But as the company fights in court to prove that it’s not stealing IP, it is making moves in self-driving in an effort to find its own identity.
Xpeng has seen several changes in its self-driving team since Tesla began its legal offensive. Gu, the young Tesla hire who previously led autonomous driving, finally left the company this March due to “personal career and family reasons,” after reportedly being idle from any management roles for a couple of months.
Meanwhile, Cao’s position has been filled by Wang Tao, the co-founder of Drive.ai, the self-driving startup acquired by Apple in June 2019, according to Xpeng slides that were shared with the media last year.
Xpeng is forging on. In March, the company launched its first electric sedan model, the P7. The vehicle is equipped with Xpilot 3.0, Xpeng’s latest driver assistance system. The EV startup is attempting to follow the path set by backers Alibaba and Xiaomi—from copycat to Chinese original. It’s promising self-driving technology software and hardware that is different from Tesla, with executives claiming that its systems are optimized to better handle China’s crowded roads.
“I strongly believe that P7 will provide the best driver-assist experience in China,” Xpeng’s He said during the sedan’s launch event last month.
As the legal battle between Tesla and Xpeng heats up, the P7 could allow Xpeng to show that its days of imitating Tesla are over. But the stakes are high. EV leaders expect bankruptcies to dominate the headlines. Li Xiang, the founder of rival EV firm Lixiang, recently warned: “Given the hardship in the Chinese auto market, there is a possibility that only three out of more than 100 EV startups could survive … and I hope Nio and Xpeng can be with us.” It may all come down to a judge in San Francisco.
]]>Smartphone apps from several of China’s top banks over-collect user data and force customers to give up personal information to use their apps, according to a report released on Friday.
Why it matters: Chinese authorities have attempted to crack down on widespread unnecessary data collection over the past year, calling out companies for collecting more personal information than necessary.
Details: The Pudong Development Bank, Bank of Beijing, Bank of Shanghai, and Bank of Jiangsu force users to give access to their mobile phone information in order for the banks’ apps to work correctly, the Nandu Personal Information Protection Research Center said on Thursday.
Context: China introduced its landmark Cybersecurity Law in 2017, which has served as a framework for developing data protection regulations.
In an unprecedented move, US-based electric vehicle maker Tesla has made a request to examine a competitor’s entire repository of autonomous-driving source code and senior executives’ hard drives as part of a lawsuit against a former employee.
The EV giant has escalated its offensive against Cao Guangzhi, whom the company has accused of stealing trade secrets before he moved to XMotors, a US-based sister company to Chinese EV manufacturer Xpeng, in January 2019.
This article first appeared in Drive I/O, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on autonomous and electric vehicles, on April 29. Didn’t get this in your inbox? Get in touch and we’ll fix it!
Cao served as head of perception at XMotors, though he has been on leave since the investigation began. Tesla alleges that Cao copied Autopilot source code during his time at Tesla, and that the software could have benefited Xpeng.
Now, one year after filing a suit against the Chinese engineer, Tesla is attempting to gain access to a vast array of Xpeng’s internal communications and proprietary code in a push to indict Cao. Court documents reviewed by TechNode reveal that Tesla is taking an extraordinarily aggressive approach to the dispute with its smaller rival.
Tesla argues that Cao’s arrival at XMotors mirrors that of former Apple engineer Zhang Xiaolang, who was arrested in the US on charges of stealing proprietary information related to Apple’s self-driving car project before joining XMotors.
Xpeng is hardening its stance in the escalating legal battle with Tesla in an uncharacteristically public way.
Tesla first filed a civil complaint against Cao in March 2019, claiming the engineer had copied Autopilot-related source code to his personal iCloud account in a nine-month period before leaving Tesla. Neither Xpeng nor XMotors have been charged in Tesla’s suit.
In July 2019, Cao acknowledged that he had downloaded and stored Tesla source code on his personal laptop, but pleaded not guilty to theft charges. The dispute remained at a deadlock.
In November of 2019, Tesla issued its first subpoena to XMotors, seeking a broad array of information, including “all non-privileged” internal communications involving Cao. The request included any correspondence on the popular messaging app WeChat that was related to Tesla and Autopilot.
Tesla also requested Cao’s personal messages to XMotors employees, as well as his compensation and employment terms with Xpeng. XMotors responded to Tesla’s request in December by filing 6,333 pages of documents. An initial investigation found no evidence that XMotors encouraged Cao to exploit Tesla’s source code for its benefit.
After nearly a year of litigation, Tesla issued a second subpoena to XMotors this January, requesting an array of documents as well as XMotor’s entire repository of autonomous-driving source code from before Cao was recruited, to after he was placed on leave in March 2019.
Tesla’s request extended to images of entire hard drives from various Xpeng employees’ work computers, including those of the company’s CEO He Xiaopeng and president Brian Gu. The request also demanded that Xpeng make an employee available for an interview.
Tesla’s latest requests have infuriated the domestic EV startup. This is “just a fishing expedition meant to bully and disrupt a young competitor,” Xpeng said in an announcement released April 24, just two days before the company launched the P7, its first sedan model, which competes with Tesla’s China-made Model 3. The Chinese EV maker said that Tesla’s request to broaden the scope of the investigation is “based on nothing more than sheer speculation.”
Most notably, Tesla asked XMotors for documents related to a case against Apple’s former employee Zhang Xiaolang, looking for a pattern of misconduct by XMotors in its operations and recruiting. What has caused the American EV giant to prolong its campaign against its Chinese rival? Here are some of the key findings revealed in the recent documents filed by XMotors in US courts.
Tesla’s arguments: The US EV giant is seeking to connect a previous employee accused of stealing trade secrets before joining Xpeng and the latest case against Cao. Tesla is also suspicious about the conditions under which Cao left the company.
Xpeng’s testimony: Meanwhile, Xpeng and Cao have contradicted Tesla’s claims, arguing that conversations between the engineer and his colleague had been mistranslated.
In competing with their US counterparts, Chinese companies have long been known to seek shortcuts by poaching their employees. However, it is also true that not every job switch amounts to trade secret misappropriation. At the moment, Tesla’s suspicions remain mostly hypothetical: XMotors has not been named or charged in either the criminal case against Zhang or the civil action with Cao.
“We have engaged in no wrongdoing and we have fully cooperated with Tesla for months, including voluntarily providing our own confidential information. However, Tesla’s latest demands crossed the line, seeking to rummage through our IP on Tesla’s terms,” the company said in an announcement issued last week. Tesla did not respond to a request for comment.
In its court filing of last week, XMotors said Tesla’s latest demands are an attempt to “obtain competitive information” in order to make their rival less competitive. On the other hand, Tesla claimed it had no interest in the substance of XMotors’ source code but rather wants to ascertain whether there is anything resembling its intellectual property.
Given Tesla’s dominant position in the Chinese EV market, the argument is plausible. The US carmaker delivered more than 16,000 EVs in China during the first quarter of this year, representing nearly a third of market share—even as domestic EV giant BYD faltered amid the Covid-19 outbreak. Tesla’s first-quarter sales in China are on par with nearly all of Xpeng’s annual deliveries, a margin wide enough to solidify Tesla’s leadership in the market.
Tesla’s dominance could be challenged by companies like Xpeng, which launched its first electric sedan this week. Xpeng claims the P7 is the first “L3 autonomy-ready” production vehicle with the longest driving range in China.
The company also claims that its assisted-driver system Xpilot differs from those of its rivals because it is tailor-made for congested Chinese traffic situations. CEO He Xiaopeng promised to offer the “best user experience” with features that include autonomous lane changing on highways—to be made available via an update next year.
At a third of the price of Tesla Model S, Xpeng’s newest vehicle has elicited strong interest from some Chinese EV enthusiasts. “The P7 could be the most cost-effective EV sedan available in the market,” said one netizen in a WeChat group for EV fans after Tuesday’s press conference.
Although it’s still unclear whether the P7 could be a “Tesla killer” that may also help Xpeng outperform its Chinese rivals, the two companies’ escalating court battle and the fight for pole position in the world’s largest EV market is only just beginning.
Correction: A previous version of this newsletter incorrectly stated that two former Apple engineers joined Xpeng after leaving the US tech giant. Only Zhang Xiaolang joined the company. This text has also been amended to clarify that Cao Guangzhi was placed on administrative leave in March 2019.
]]>Tencent-backed cloud artificial intelligence-training platform Enflame Technology has raised RMB 700 million ($98.6 million) in Series B funding, the company said on Thursday.
Why it matters: The coronavirus pandemic has made raising money more difficult for cash-strapped startups. In the first quarter, venture capital investments in China dropped by a third compared with the same period a year ago, according to data from Itjuzi.
Details: Enflame Technology has closed its RMB 700 million Series B, with Beijing-based private equity firm Summitview Capital leading the round.
Context: Enflame is not the only company aiming to improve data center performance. In September, e-commerce giant Alibaba unveiled a self-developed AI chip that was being used to optimize product search and automatic translations on the company’s e-commerce sites.
China has released new rules requiring companies buying networking products and services to perform cybersecurity evaluations for vulnerabilities that could affect national security.
Why it matters: China has been imposing stricter controls over the technology that makes up the backbone of its internet and how people interact in the cyber world.
Details: Operators of “critical information infrastructure” are required to conduct reviews of networking equipment and services to address any national security concerns, China’s internet watchdog said this week (in Chinese).
Context: Previous updates to China’s cybersecurity frameworks placed additional burdens on foreign companies and how they handle data collected from Chinese citizens.
A Chinese artificial intelligence firm has become the latest victim of Covid-19 cyberattacks, as hackers look to profit off stolen medical data and research in the midst of the pandemic.
Why it matters: The outbreak has led to a surge in illicit cyber activity, with hackers targeting individuals, companies, and governments.
Details: Huiying Medical, a Beijing-based company developing AI-based tools to diagnose Covid-19 infections, had its source code and experimental data stolen, researchers from US-based cybersecurity company Cyble said over the weekend.
Context: Hackers have capitalized on growing Covid-19 fears around the world as a means to get their hands on sensitive corporate information and personal data.
Chinese facial recognition firm Megvii is reportedly considering a listing on Shanghai’s Nasdaq-like Star Market in order to make the most of favorable policies at home.
Why it matters: Megvii was initially planning a Hong Kong IPO but the company’s inclusion on the US’ so-called Entity List and the coronavirus outbreak have presented significant roadblocks.
Read more: New STAR Market could lure domestic tech firms from Hong Kong IPO
Details: Despite considering a listing in Shanghai, neither Megvii nor its shareholders are in a rush to go public, one of the sources told SCMP.
After taking a significant hit following the nationwide Covid-19 lockdown, electric vehicle (EV) sales in the world’s biggest market are finally showing signs of recovery.
In February, according to figures from the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA), new energy vehicle (NEV) sales plunged 77% year-on-year to a mere 11,000 vehicles—the lowest since January 2017, when Beijing began phasing out subsidies on electric vehicle purchases.
But the tide is turning. Some automakers are beginning to buck the downward trend after the Chinese government stepped to triage its embattled EV sector, rolling back strict rules on the bloated sector and providing additional support to automakers and EV buyers.
This article first appeared in Drive I/O, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on autonomous and electric vehicles, on April 15. Didn’t get this in your inbox? Get in touch and we’ll fix it!
China’s biggest automakers have been the hardest hit by the virus. In March, the country’s NEV giants—BYD, BAIC, and Geely—saw their deliveries plummet by two-thirds year-on-year. This marked three consecutive months of decline, in which the automakers saw their deliveries fall by more than half.
Covid-19 had effectively crippled China’s mobility industry. In February, as lockdowns to contain the disease spread across China, the need for transportation services disappeared. Taxi and ride-hailing services—usually cash cows for China’s biggest OEMs—came to a standstill due to weak demand and poor revenue, the CPCA wrote in a March report (in Chinese).
BYD, BJEV, and Geely are the largest players in China’s business EV market. Not only do they supply EVs for mobility services in their home cities, but their vehicles are also deployed in countless cities nationwide as local governments electrify their taxi fleets.
Last year, BAIC reportedly received orders for more than 80,000 EVs from various ride-hailing services, while Geely inked a deal with Chengdu to replace the city’s fleet of 10,000 gas-powered taxis with EVs by the end of 2020. But the economic pressures faced by ride-hailing operators during the outbreak resulted in a “significant number” of new car orders being canceled, said Cui Dongshu, secretary-general of CPCA, on April 9. As infection rates climbed, electrification of these fleets became a low priority. Now, as more than 50 cities resume taxi services after a month-long suspension, China’s auto giants remain in the doldrums.
However, there have been a few winners. Chinese EV darling Nio and the American carmaker Tesla have bucked the trend.
The US EV giant recently reported record-high first-quarter results but did not disclose figures for sales in China. However, according to figures obtained by CPCA, the company delivered 10,160 EVs in China last month. That figure made up over 20% of the country’s all-electric market, and Tesla trailed BYD—one of China’s biggest automakers—by just a few dozen deliveries.
Late last month, Tesla’s Shanghai Gigafactory achieved weekly production capacity of 3,000 Model 3s, and is poised to offload around 150,000 China-made EVs this year.
Nio, which has faced its share of struggles, also outperformed the country’s biggest manufacturers over the past three months. During the first two months of 2020, combined sales of its flagship ES8 SUV and smaller ES6 only decreased around 12% from a year earlier.
The fall was followed in March by a 12% year-on-year increase in deliveries to 1,533 vehicles. “All signs point to a much faster demand recovery in the premium segment versus mass,” Bernstein analysts led by Robin Zhu wrote in a research note on April 8.
This appears to explain Nio’s relatively strong performance in the crumbling market over the past few months. The company has beaten the giants in the Chinese luxury EV sector. Over the past year, sales of its ES6 came out ahead of Mercedes Benz’s EQC and Audi’s e-tron in China, according to official car registration data.
However, Tesla now poses a bigger threat. The China-made Model 3 and Y could take market share from Nio, preventing the Chinese EV maker from improving earnings, analysts at China’s Everbright Securities said in March.
Nio aims to sell 4,000 cars a month this year, which the company says could “basically support its operational targets,” including a double-digit profit margin in the fourth quarter. Bernstein analysts predict Nio sales will rebound in the second quarter as the pandemic fades. “But the threat of competition from Tesla will only become more pertinent over time,” they said.
The turnaround for smaller EV makers can be attributed in part to China’s push to revive its flagging EV sector.
Before the coronavirus outbreak, Beijing had already been fighting to keep its electric vehicle industry afloat. The sector had gone into drastic decline since June of last year, when authorities cut subsidies by up to 50% for EV purchases. The hope was that reductions would spur innovation in a sector many believed had become too reliant on government support.
But in early January, China’s industry minister said the country would suspend further subsidy reductions in order to counter the months-long slump. The announcement came 10 days before China’s economy was turned upside down by wide-ranging quarantines and stay-at-home orders to curb the spread of Covid-19. As infection rates soared, authorities shuttered production plants and closed brick-and-mortar stores. Although February is typically a slow month for China’s auto industry, the shutdowns led to an unprecedented decline in deliveries.
Beijing is now leading a sector-wide bailout of its EV industry by backtracking on plans to completely axe subsidies this year as well as lowering barriers to entry for new EV makers. The government hopes to restore growth in the world’s largest market for electrified transportation in an offensive that, at this stage, seems to be working.
As China moves closer to something resembling normalcy following the drastic disruption to the economy, the State Council, China’s cabinet, made a surprise announcement: Subsidies and tax breaks for EV buyers will remain in place until 2022. The government had originally planned to do away with them completely this year.
The communiqué, which came just two and a half months after regulators decided that no further cuts would be implemented in 2020, represent a dramatic shift in direction. After NEV deliveries slid by nearly 80% in February, authorities ultimately decided to take matters into their own hands instead of allowing the industry to stand on its own two feet.
Postponing further subsidy cuts represents just one of the ways that Chinese authorities are attempting to restore the industry to its former glory and rescue automakers that have been deeply affected by the virus.
The country’s notorious production quota system is also reportedly being temporarily relaxed. The system has been used to drive EV production by requiring domestic automakers to follow strict guidelines on reaching EV building goals.
Bigger automakers—which have been some of the hardest hit in the past three months—may now be allowed to focus on better-selling gas-driven cars and to delay new EV launches in order to improve their dwindling cash reserves.
Local governments are also helping to bail out troubled automakers with massive cash injections. Nio has signed a deal with the government of Hefei, the capital of east China’s Anhui province, worth RMB 10 billion (around $1.4 billion). The long-awaited deal is expected to rescue the company from a liquidity crunch after months of no investment.
Meanwhile, the government of Henan province invested RMB 2.02 billion for a 60% stake in Shanghai-based EV maker Reech Auto. Although the company has yet to start producing vehicles, they have struck a deal with state-owned carmaker Changan to produce its vehicles.
Beijing is also making it easier for fledgling automakers to enter the market by lowering barriers to entry. The government will no longer insist that EV makers be capable of product development, according to draft changes to current policies released on April 7 by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The measures had previously been put in place to calm a regulatory bubble that had seen nearly 500 EV companies established throughout China.
]]>Search giant Baidu has accused a former executive of corruption and handed the case over to the police, the company said on Tuesday.
Why it matters: An increasing number of Chinese firms have launched anti-graft initiatives that mimic the Chinese state’s approach to dealing with misconduct.
Read more: Even global tech darling DJI is not immune to culture of corruption
Details: Baidu’s Professional Ethics Committee said Fang Wei, a former vice-president at the company, is suspected of corruption following an internal investigation and has been handed over to the police.
Context: Anti-corruption campaigns are common among China’s tech companies but some take more drastic steps than others.
Chinese automakers are looking for novel ways to reach customers as people in China shy away from going outdoors.
To curb the spread of Covid-19, the new flu-like virus that has rocked the country over the past few weeks, cities across the country have imposed strict rules limiting people’s movement. The epidemic has had a profound impact on China’s auto sector, with numerous manufacturers repeatedly postponing the reopening of their production facilities. Just one-third of Chinese automakers have resumed production, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) said on Feb. 13.
Beyond production issues, EV makers are struggling to sell their cars. Electric vehicle makers Tesla and its Chinese rival Nio said last week that they expect significant adverse effects on their business as a result of the virus. Cui Dongshu, secretary-general of the China Passenger Car Association, said that only 5% of car dealerships in China had reopened for business last week.
As a result, EV makers in China have moved the battlefield from offline stores to the virtual world in a bid for customers’ attention. What have these companies been doing on Chinese social media and live-streaming platforms to win the favor of potential car buyers? Are these attempts to maintain their presence and boost sales truly effective?
In a step further from traditional auto showrooms and toward contemporary Chinese retail mores, Tesla opened a TMall digital store on April 16. On April 21, Tesla started broadcasting a car-themed EV livestream for an hour a day (one pm to two pm).
From the TechNode archives, we bring you a look at the company’s awkward first steps into livestreaming, during the high lockdown of February. Originally available only as a members’ e-mail newsletter, we’re now making the piece free for all readers. Start your free trial now.
Nio, Tesla’s most high-profile rival in China, has joined the attention economy.
As people hunker down at home to limit potential exposure to Covid-19, the EV maker has started live-streaming an eclectic collection of shows 12 hours a day, hoping to capture the minds and wallets of the country’s upper-middle class. A team of influence peddlers host the shows, including stylish employees and influential car owners.
Nio is not the only EV maker to join the live-streaming battle. Established automakers from BMW to China’s Geely are exploiting the format in pursuit of customers. These automakers have taken to the enormously popular short-video platforms Douyin (known internationally as TikTok) and Kuaishou. These two platforms were among the top five Chinese mobile apps with more than 200 million daily active users during this year’s Spring Festival holidays, according to the latest report by market research firm QuestMobile.
Live-streaming appears to be a perfect fit for auto sales at a moment when fears of the epidemic have left shops bereft of customers and trying to prop up sales during a continuing downturn in the auto market.
For Nio, the move aligns with the company’s ongoing efforts to expand its community and Nio House clubhouses online.
In one live-streamed video, Nio employees can be seen taking an ES6 electric crossover out for a drive on a frigid sunny morning, giving viewers a hands-on experience on what it’s like to use the company’s assisted driver system, Nio Pilot. In another video, a host compares a Tesla with one of the company’s own cars, pointing out differences in design and workmanship.
Nio owners, who pride themselves on their loyalty to the EV maker, are participating in the company’s online crusade. TechNode joined in a nighttime livestream hosted by Wang Zhengyang, a longtime Nio owner who lives in northeastern China’s Heilongjiang province. Within the first 30 minutes of the show, Wang fielded more than a dozen questions from livestream viewers, all from within his parked car. Queries ranged from the possible price of Nio’s recently launched EC6 coupe to the range of electric vehicles in colder climates. Wang also presented tutorials on the basics of driving an EV.
As the first ES6 owner in one of the coldest provinces in China, Wang spent three hours addressing problems of other customers all over the country. His shows have continued for more than 10 days, according to the program lists Nio has published within its app.
What really differentiates Nio from other automakers in this online battle for customers’ attention is the variety of their content, essentially moving leisure activities from the offline world to online. Nio has presented dozens of different reality shows in real time this month. From teaching women about how to apply makeup to sharing secrets for brewing coffee, Nio’s sales officers are constantly seeking out topics of interest for their potential customers.
The move originated with Nio Houses, the company’s exclusive clubhouses for customers in its flagship stores. Prior to the Covid-19 outbreak, Nio owners had organized events and made connections in these spaces, which are equipped with a co-working space, a café, and even a childcare center.
In an online network that is not subject to the restrictions of space, Nio is not only trying to draw the attention of customers with different interests and backgrounds, but also fulfilling an ambitious goal: building connections with its community using a customer-centric strategy. Nio’s customer loyalty is the company’s strength, and it is playing to that strength to solidify its reputation.
Nio is not alone in its online crusade. Tesla has also taken to short videos and live-streaming in China, but unlike its competitor, the American EV maker has suffered from poor planning and unprofessional hosts.
On Feb. 8, just one day after Nio launched its revitalized online marketing campaign, two Tesla stores in the Pudong area of Shanghai opened accounts on Douyin. Tesla stores in other Chinese cities have also set up Douyin accounts.
In comparison to Nio, Tesla’s official Douyin account consistently posts swanky, yet less focused, content that ranges from videos of the Cybertruck and Roadstar 2 to goofy skits. The company’s default policy has been to let its local stores determine what content they post. Tesla has yet to designate a person to develop a central content strategy, two Tesla salespeople said when contacted by TechNode last week.
In one of these livestreams, a young Tesla employee used the last 15 minutes of the show to make small talk with his dozen viewers. These conversations included urging a customer to take out a loan on a new car, adding that a RMB 40,000 (about $5,700) down payment on a car was “quite cheap.” The host went on to make fun of his own hair, saying that he was unhappy with the wavy hairstyle and complaining that salons have remained closed because of the outbreak.
In another livestream, a salesperson wearing a facemask walked around a Model X in a Tesla store, providing detailed information about the car. A female assistant took the camera and occasionally asked questions sent by viewers. The sales supervisor was knowledgeable about EVs and careful in the choice of his words. Faced with a hardball question about the car’s wind noise, he acknowledged that the Model X’s fastback roof and frameless doors make wind noise reduction more challenging than for other cars. However, the distracting spectacle of several employees goofing off nearby spoiled the professionalism of the video. During the 20 minutes that TechNode viewed this livestream, fewer than 10 viewers were watching the show.
One possible explanation for Tesla’s less-focused content is less need—sales have been good since the company began accepting orders for its Chinese-made Model 3. Meanwhile, Nio has warned that it expects deliveries to drop off in February.
EV makers in China have always taken an internet-first approach to their businesses. But the recent virus outbreak has made this modus operandi a matter of necessity rather than just convenience.
As the government has encouraged—and constrained—people to stay indoors, the entire process of buying a car has moved online. Many EV companies are providing “online showrooms” via live-streaming, where potential buyers ask questions and interact with the host just as they would in a physical space.
Interested individuals can book a door-to-door test drive, in which the company brings the car to them and takes them back home after the drive. And if they decide to buy that electric vehicle, they can order and pay online, and have the car delivered directly to them.
A Tesla salesperson in Shanghai told TechNode that if the deposit for a China-made Model 3 is paid now, a test drive can be arranged for March. If the customer feels the vehicle isn’t up to standard, the deposit will be returned.
However, the process relies on piquing the interest of customers, and so far, live-streaming has had mixed results for EV makers.
According to TechNode’s investigation, vehicle-related live-streams do well in audience terms, often drawing more than 100 viewers per show. One Nio video detailing the company’s self-driving capabilities attracted more than 1,000 viewers. However, the company’s lifestyle livestreams typically get many fewer views.
“Everyone cares more about hardcore content,” an EV fan in Xiamen told TechNode, referring to videos about actual cars rather than other topics.
The diverse types of content are directed at different audiences: those who are interested in buying cars and those who are already part of the EV community. Nio in particular is clearly attempting to expand its Nio House concept to the online space by providing non-vehicle-related services and content.
Nevertheless, numerous viewers appear to be less than impressed with some of the livestreams, describing the live shows as “boring” and lacking in informative content. Given that these livestreams have yet to garner many viewers, it’s unclear how successful the format may be in converting viewers to buyers.
If EV live-streaming gains a widespread following, it could potentially allow companies to scale back their presence in brick-and-mortar stores, dramatically reducing overhead.
For now, however, this avenue of sales is all that EV companies really have, as many city governments have enforced temporary closures of nonessential stores to stop the spread of the virus.
“Offline channels are basically blocked,” said a user on microblogging platform Weibo. “Now only those online can be used.”
]]>Alibaba Cloud, a subsidiary of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, will spend RMB 200 billion ($28.27 billion) on its cloud infrastructure over the next three years following an increase in demand for digital services in the aftermath of the Covid-19 outbreak in China.
Why it matters: Alibaba’s cloud revenue grew 62% in the quarter ended December 2019 compared with the same quarter a year earlier, the company said in February.
Details: Alibaba’s investment will focus on operating system and chip development, as well as on its network of data centers, where the technologies will be deployed.
Context: Alibaba has increased its focus on cloud computing over the past two years, seeing the business as a major driver of growth.
Beijing is promising big spending on “new infrastructure” amid post-virus stimulus. The government says it will focus on electric vehicle (EV) charging infrastructure, an upgraded electrical grid, artificial intelligence, 5G networks, improved transportation systems, and data centers to drive the economy towards recovery.
While China has not announced official figures, analysts from China Sinolink Securities, which has produced the most comprehensive and widely cited estimates, expect the total to reach RMB 1 trillion (around $141.3 billion) in 2020.
Bottom line: Don’t count on high-tech infrastructure to overcome a recession—it’s outweighed by traditional projects. But this investment gusher is accelerating deployment of technologies like connected roads, improved telecommunications networks, and electric vehicle charging stations.
A familiar remedy: China has typically turned to infrastructure spending in the face of economic troubles. During the 1998 Asian Financial Crisis, the government issued billions of yuan in treasury bonds to increase investment in roads, utilities, railways, and telecommunications.
Apart from traditional road infrastructure projects, China is looking to build intelligent transport systems that incorporate technologies such as 5G, artificial intelligence, and the Internet of Things. While Beijing has not outlined a budget for connected roads, Sinolink expects (in Chinese) the government to spend nearly RMB 450 billion on supporting technologies.
Read more: China’s AV edge? It’s the infrastructure
Baidu does well: China’s search giant Baidu has become a major beneficiary of China’s recent drive to increase spending on new infrastructure projects that incorporate these sorts of technologies.
A head start in a race to set standards: Early mass implementation of China’s standards for C-V2X could lead to wider adoption around the world, and more money for Chinese companies, as deliberation over opposing systems grows.
The official cliché is that 5G is the “highway of the information age.” The next-generation wireless network is also seen by state media (in Chinese) as the “bellwether” for the seven key areas of the new infrastructure projects.
Some are more equal: While Beijing has repeatedly said that foreign companies have “equal opportunities” to participate in the rollout of its 5G networks, most of the budget will probably go to domestic vendors such as Huawei and ZTE.
At the heart of the national policies for global leadership in technology, electric vehicles were not left out of the big funding boost. Beijing has announced plans to spend RMB 10 billion on the country’s scattered charging network in a bid to increase EV uptake.
Much needed: A charging station buildout could help the struggling EV industry draw in customers.
A tough business: Charging infrastructure could use the help—experts warn that it’s hard for companies to succeed with it in market terms.
Unprecedented support from Beijing could drive a surge of capital flow into technology sectors, however, the impact to shore up the entire economy might be limited.
Luckin Coffee is one of nearly 20 companies that could have its app removed from app stores. All 20 were called out by the Chinese government for violating privacy protection rules.
Why it matters: The embattled coffee giant admitted earlier this month that several of its employees, including its management team, fabricated sales for much of 2019, with the fake transactions amounting to around RMB 2.2 billion ($312 million).
Details: China’s National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center (CVERC) said on Friday that a version of Luckin’s mobile app, along with applications from Pizza Hut, Yonghui Superstores, grocery delivery platform Meicai, and Pingan Good Doctor had violated rules governing data collection.
Context: China has led a crackdown on app developers that don’t adhere to regulations governing data collection.
Chinese AI startups have raised at least $420 million this month, defying a steep drop in fundraising in China’s tech sector amid the Covid-19 pandemic.
Why it matters: China’s AI firms have grown off the back the government’s drive to become a leader in the technology by 2020 but haven’t been immune to the outbreak of the flu-like virus.
Details: Speech recognition firm AISpeech, AI chipmaker Intellifusion, and machine learning firm 4Paradigm have collectively raised $429 million since the beginning of April.
Context: Despite signs of a recovery in investor sentiment, the Covid-19 outbreak will likely have a significant impact on China’a AI firms, and the tech sector as a whole.
Baidu’s Apollo autonomous driving program has thrust the search giant into the spotlight. Named after NASA’s moon missions, the self-driving program recently enjoyed a series of wins when Baidu came out on top in annual self-driving reports released by authorities in California and Beijing.
But when Baidu unseated Google’s self-driving division Waymo to take the top spot in California’s disengagement report, it was been greeted with widespread skepticism. The utility of the report has been called into question, casting doubt over using the metrics to assess the AV companies’ technologies.
This article first appeared in Drive I/O, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on autonomous and electric vehicles, on April 1.
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Waymo has said the reports do not provide “relevant insights” or distinguish their company’s “performance from others in the self-driving space.” Kyle Vogt, the CTO of General Motors-backed Cruise, shared similar sentiments. “The idea that disengagements give a meaningful signal about whether an AV is ready for commercial deployment is a myth,” he wrote in a blog post.
Still, much is expected of Baidu’s self-driving efforts. The company has launched autonomous ride-hailing services in Changsha, the capital of Hunan province, as well as in Cangzhou, in north China’s Hebei province, with a fleet of 30 cars. Baidu’s autonomous driving tests have covered more than 3 million kilometers on public roads across 23 Chinese cities.
Where are Baidu’s self-driving cars headed in 2020? What is the outlook for Baidu in autonomous ride-hailing? We will start with our recent experience in a Baidu robotaxi in Changsha and move on from there.
Robotaxis are all the rage. Around the world, startup and tech giants alike are fighting the war for self-driving supremacy, and autonomous taxis have become the new battleground.
Companies including Baidu, Pony.ai, and WeRide have launched robotaxi pilots across China. Baidu, the country’s designated self-driving champion, began offering its robotaxi service in Changsha last September.
Three months later, TechNode arrived in downtown Changsha. Standing outside a well-known culture and arts center on a sun-washed December afternoon, we waited for a Baidu self-driving taxi to pull up.
The trip showed us how companies are taking vastly different approaches to developing their self-driving technologies, and just how difficult it is to create global benchmarks detailing how these vehicles should perform.
Baidu runs its autonomous taxis in and around Changsha’s downtown Xiangjiang New Area. The trial operation is more of a geo-fenced test on public roads; passengers can pick one of three fixed five-kilometer routes, all starting from the city’s grand theater.
The tech giant has partnered with Chinese state-owned automaker FAW Group, which provides the vehicle for its autonomous system. As the luxury Hongqi model arrived to pick us up on that balmy December afternoon, we quickly took one photo before we were told that pictures were not allowed.
Shortly after we got into the car and entered Changsha traffic, Baidu’s approach to its self-driving program became evident. It was like going for a ride with a nervous student driver.
Companies that develop self-driving technology need to consider not only the safety of their passengers but also the comfort of the ride. Baidu places more emphasis on safety than we had expected, resulting in a trip that was less smooth than AV rides we’d experienced from companies that squeeze more efforts to the comfort of their passengers.
“Our top priority is zero accidents on the road,” our vehicle’s safety driver said while we waited at a traffic light. He offered a glimpse into how the company’s safety precautions are meant to protect the trial project from any sort of controversy. “All of us are required to take a 10-minute break for each hour of work,” the driver told us.
During our trip, Baidu’s robotaxi traveled at speeds of around 30 kilometers per hour and stopped by itself every now and then to yield to pedestrians. Traffic was heavy, with cars filling the six-lane Meixi Lake Road, downtown Changsha’s main avenue.
When the vehicle stopped at a red light in the middle of an intersection, we got to see firsthand the safety precautions that our driver had described: After a few minutes of waiting, the human driver had to take over. Situations like these are typically evaluated as “too risky” for the autonomous system to navigate. Baidu says it has reported “zero accidents” in the past few years because of its “safety-first” approach.
The company has requested that its fleet of dozens of vehicles in Changsha log a certain amount of mileage each day, our safety driver told TechNode, without revealing any further details. Meanwhile, working hours are very limited since the company has not been allowed to test during rush hour. Therefore, overtime work during weekends has become common.
Baidu is taking a more conservative approach to its AV road testing, emphasizing safety over comfort, a self-driving car engineer said, commenting on TechNode’s observations of our robotaxi ride.
Slower driving speeds, hesitation when turning or changing lanes, and constant stops when facing dangerous scenarios are among the passive driving strategies that result, the engineer said, who asked not to be named because he was not permitted to speak to the media.
A focus on safety, alongside a goal of fewer human interventions, can be achieved by developing a cautious algorithm, helped by some of the high-performance hardware that acts as the eyes of self-driving vehicles.
For years, safety and comfort have been among the top priorities for robotaxi companies offering driverless experiences. “No doubt safety is the key to getting autonomous cars on the roads,” but a better solution could be a wider range of driving styles with safety guarantees to ensure more comfort for passengers, the engineer said. There should have been some “more decisive driving policies” he said, referring to how the vehicle could have taken proactive measures to avoid dangerous situations, such as changing lanes.
Baidu’s prudence could be part of the reason the company came out on top in the recent self-driving report released by California’s Department of Motor Vehicles.
Baidu beat Google’s self-driving unit Waymo by reporting the least number of disengagements among all companies operating such vehicles in the state. A disengagement is defined as any time a human driver is required to take over from an autonomous system during self-driving tests.
But within the industry, questions over the relevance of such metrics are on the rise, with experts saying that the measure has limits when trying to gauge whether a company’s technologies are ready to be deployed commercially.
AV companies themselves have also highlighted the report’s limited usefulness. In an announcement, Baidu said disengagement is more of an internal reflection of the speed of technical iterations, and therefore comparison between companies is “not that meaningful.”
However, if disengagement rates offer few relevant insights into the technology, what are the measurable metrics that could indicate progress? Two experts that TechNode spoke with gave the same answer: the variety and complexity of testing scenarios in which a robocar can operate.
Keeping within a lane in urban traffic, recognizing traffic signals, or turning left at an intersection without a “green arrow” traffic signal are some of the most typical and frequently seen scenarios identified and tested by AV players.
However, the real difficulty is to get autonomous cars to operate under “edge cases,” or unusual circumstances, such as a nearby vehicle changing lanes abruptly, a motorcycle coming out of nowhere, or drunk driving behavior from other road users.
These scenarios could be used to create a benchmark dataset that enables companies to train and evaluate their algorithms and compare accuracy rates to effectively evaluate their technologies, much like ImageNet, a renowned computer vision dataset of more than 14 million photographs widely used to evaluate the performance of AI systems.
“The more driving scenarios your cars can handle, the more you can prove the safety of the technology,” said one of the experts. Nevertheless, problems persist because the industry has not reached a consensus on standards.
The self-driving industry has now evolved from being driven by research and development of AV technologies to being mostly pushed forward by testing efforts. The development of key technologies, such as environment perception and car control, have mostly been completed; the priority now is to gain experience in as many driving cases as possible and learn how to deal with them, the experts added.
Every new experience helps a self-driving car to learn, and that’s where some of the world’s AV leaders are ramping up their efforts. Last year, Cruise almost doubled its testing and validation miles from the year prior, and “every mile Cruise tested in California was driven in the very complex urban environment of San Francisco,” it said in its individual filing.
The company, which is mainly backed by General Motors, operates a fleet of 228 vehicles that drove more than 831,000 miles last year, nearly eight times that of Baidu. As of last December, the Chinese search giant claimed its vehicles had traveled a total of more than 3 million kilometers (1.86 million miles).
But wider tests in China are coming as more local governments join in the race to open their roads to robotaxi companies, allowing them to collect more data and develop better evaluation methods. We’ll have to wait and see who comes out in pole position.
]]>Chinese cybersecurity experts claim Korean hackers have launched a wide-ranging hacking campaign against China’s government and its overseas diplomat missions, amid heightened coronavirus fears around the world.
Why it matters: Qihoo 360 speculated that the hackers, dubbed DarkHotel, may have been attempting to access information relating to the Covid-19 outbreak in China, including infection data and information relating to China’s recovery.
Details: DarkHotel used a vulnerability in Chinese virtual private network (VPN) service Sangfor to attack China’s government agencies in around 20 countries, including the UK, Italy, and the United Arab Emirates, according to Chinese cybersecurity company Qihoo 360.
“Once VPNs are controlled by threat actors, the internal assets of many enterprises and institutions will be exposed to the public network, and the loss will be immeasurable.“
—Qihoo 360 researchers
Context: Hackers around the world have used the Covid-19 pandemic as a means to gain access to sensitive corporate and personal data.
]]>Chinese search firm Baidu is planning a $1 billion note offering to repay existing debts and fund general operations, the company said on Wednesday.
Why it matters: Baidu had a rough 2019 and expects flagging revenue in the first quarter of this year after the fallout from Covid-19, which has infected more than 940,000 people around the world.
Details: The offering consists of $600 million of 3.075% notes due in 2025 and $400 million of 3.425% notes due in 2030. They are expected to be listed on the Singapore stock exchange, Baidu said.
Context: China is attempting to reach a semblance of normalcy after the country’s took unprecedented measures to control the spread of Covid-19.
Ride-hailing giant Didi has resumed limited nighttime operations of its carpooling service Hitch in some cities across China, while implementing stricter identity checks for drivers and passengers.
Why it matters: Didi suspended Hitch indefinitely in 2018 following two separate incidents in which drivers on the platform raped and murdered their female passengers.
Details: Passengers in cities including Beijing, Shanghai, and Hangzhou will now be able to use Hitch until 11 p.m., Didi said in a post on microblogging platform Weibo on Friday.
Context: China’s ride-hailing industry has faced compounding issues over the past two years. Apart from safety concerns, the Covid-19 outbreak as resulted in flagging demand since the beginning of the year.
Robotruck startup TuSimple has partnered with German auto supplier ZF to develop and commercialize technology for autonomous trucks.
Why it matters: TuSimple aims to begin testing truly driverless trucks—those without safety personnel on board—by 2021.
Details: TuSimple and ZF will work together to develop onboard computers and sensors such as radar and lidar for autonomous trucks, according to a statement released Thursday. The German supplier will also become TuSimple’s “default supplier” when commercializing robotrucks.
Context: Autonomous trucks are expected to reach commercialization before passenger vehicles, presenting huge potential for growth. TuSimple aims to transform America’s $800 billion trucking industry with autonomous rigs.
For the first time in history, a Chinese company has taken the top spot among firms testing autonomous vehicles on California public roads.
In February, Baidu reported the lowest rate of human intervention in 2019 as compared to companies that include Waymo, Cruise, and Pony.ai. When testing these AVs on public roads, these firms are required to submit data: the number of miles their vehicles drove autonomously and how often a human driver was required to take over—incidents that are known as disengagements.
This article first appeared in Drive I/O, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on autonomous and electric vehicles, on March 18.
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In 2019, Baidu drove 108,300 miles and reported six disengagements across its four vehicles, making for the lowest disengagement rate of all the companies listed in California’s annual report: 0.055 per 1,000 self-driven miles.
Baidu had drastically improved its performance over last year’s report, In 2018, the company reported one disengagement every 205 miles. This year, that number fell to one for every 18,050 miles. In doing so, the company managed to knock Waymo out of its top-ranked position. Baidu attributed the drop to rapid expansion in testing fields over the past three years.
But as the industry matures, disengagements are increasingly being seen as a poor measure of performance, since road and weather conditions, which play a huge role in report results, are not included in the data. Meanwhile, Baidu’s reports contain significantly less information about disengagements than its peers, causing industry insiders to raise questions about the quality of the company’s tests.
According to Baidu’s report, the company’s vehicles required human intervention in certain situations: when surrounding objects were not detected or were misclassified, when a decision made by the autonomous system was not appropriate to the scenario, or when there was a problem with the hardware.
However, Baidu does not provide any additional information about the situation under which these disengagements occurred, only broad categories. Meanwhile, several of its rivals’ reports provide more detail about each incident that resulted in a disengagement.
For example, where Chinese counterpart Pony.ai said of one disengagement: “Driver precautionarily intervened for a reckless neighboring vehicle cutting into vehicle’s lane,” Baidu would simply say “perception discrepancy,” making it difficult to gauge just how well the company’s AV system functions.
To be fair, self-driving startup WeRide also lacked detailed descriptions in its reports. These companies are not required to include comprehensive accounts of every disengagement. However, many well-established players do, including Cruise, Didi, and Zoox.
Other aspects of the company’s testing regime are also absent. The company does not mention in its report where the tests took place. Most other companies’ reports indicate where they are testing and whether they have expanded their operations in California.
Baidu is predominantly running its AVs in Sunnyvale in very simple traffic scenarios, two industry insiders told TechNode, who asked not to be named due to their proximity to the matter.
By contrast, General Motors-owned Cruise conducted all of its tests on urban roads in San Francisco, the third-most congested city in the US, according to Tomtom’s 2019 Traffic Index. Cruise reported a disengagement rate of 0.082 per 1000 miles.
A Baidu spokesperson told TechNode that the company tests in “diverse conditions,” including urban roads and scenarios involving pedestrian avoidance, left and right turns, lane changes, and traffic light recognition.
Road conditions can have a profound effect on disengagements, with more complex urban roads leading to more disengagements. Conversely, highway driving is typically seen as easy for AVs.
“If I wanted to look even better, I’d do a ton of easy freeway miles in California and do my real testing anywhere else,” Bryant Walker Smith, a self-driving car expert, told The Verge.
While Baidu took the top spot in the tests, four Chinese AV startups also made it into the Top 10. AutoX and Pony.ai came in fourth and fifth—right behind GM’s Cruise—with one disengagement every 10,684 and 6,475 miles, respectively.
Meanwhile, Didi Chuxing took the eighth position, reporting 1,535 miles per disengagement, a good result for a relative newcomer. Didi, China’s biggest ride-hailing platform, started testing in California in June 2018.
In addition, China- and California-based WeRide recorded 151.7 miles driven per disengagement, performing much worse than its Chinese peers but ranking higher than companies such as Apple, Mercedes Benz, and Toyota.
Most Chinese companies conducting tests in California revealed no further details about their operations when contacted by TechNode. However, their individual reports reveal a blurred glimpse into their performance.
Pony.ai, AutoX, and WeRide all claimed to have covered a big pool of testing scenarios in various traffic and weather conditions—either sunny days or heavy rain. However, none of them detailed when and where exactly a driver has to disengage the system. These companies gave no indication of whether these incidents occurred in downtown traffic during commutes or on empty highways at night.
In terms of test areas, all the four companies have vehicles being tested in the South Bay, while Pony.ai further expanded to Fremont, where it launched a pilot robotaxi program providing transport services from a train station to two government offices.
However, most of the areas have modest population density, around one-quarter of that of San Francisco, where GM Cruise tested its vehicles in the city’s “very complex urban environment.”
Among the four Chinese companies, Pony.ai reported that its vehicles covered the greatest distance. Its fleet of 22 vehicles logged 174,845 miles in California, the third-largest number in the ranking, although nearly a fifth of that of Cruise.
The Toyota-backed AV startup also detailed their disengagements in more detail than its Chinese counterparts. In the 27 disengagements recorded over the 12 months ending in November 2019, Pony.ai attributed eight of them to reckless driving by other vehicles, and 11 to suboptimal routes planned by software for the car to maneuver. The situations its vehicles encountered vary from insufficient yielding to reckless driving on the part of other road users.
Other AV companies reported disengagements resulting from poor detection of road objects or mapping flaws in different traffic scenarios. Although such details were presented in Didi’s reports, the ride-hailing giant revealed few reasons for disengagements, not categorizing them as planning, mapping or control issues.
Alibaba-backed AutoX referred very generally to the company’s three human intervention cases as localization and planning problems. The low number of disengagements may result from fewer miles driven than other companies. Meanwhile, Nvidia-backed WeRide reduced its miles driven by nearly two-thirds in 2019 from the year before, making little progress compared to last year.
The furor over the reports has led an increasing number of experts in the field to call into question the effectiveness of using disengagements as a metric to gauge how a vehicle is able to drive autonomously.
Disengagement reports provide an opportunity to compare AV performance between companies but discrepancies in reporting make the metric insufficient to measure performance, experts say.
In a series of tweets last month, Waymo asked whether disengagement metrics lead to meaningful insights. The company added that most of its real-world driving experience comes from outside California.
Meanwhile, Cruise Co-founder Kyle Vogt shared similar views, saying in a blog post that the reports are “woefully inadequate” to judge whether an AV is ready to be deployed commercially.
An earlier version of this article quoted a TechNode source as saying that Baidu tests AVs on Bay Area interstate highways. In fact, the company denies that its vehicles have been tested on interstate highways, and a review of interview recordings suggested that we may have misunderstood our sources’ comments.
]]>Artificial intelligence company Megvii has open-sourced its self-developed deep learning framework MegEngine, allowing developers around the world to use and improve on the platform.
Why it matters: China has set ambitious goals to be a leader in AI by 2030, but typically relies on US-origin open-source software from tech giants including Google and Facebook.
Details: Megvii has published an early version of MegEngine, with a beta release expected in June and official launch in September, the company said on Wednesday.
“We have used [MegEngine] to power our computational photography, facial recognition, and object recognition applications, but the developer community can use our foundational technology in innovative, real-world applications of AI that we have not yet imagined.”
—Sun Jian, chief scientist and head of Megvii Research
Context: China’s AI sector took a hit in October when the US placed eight Chinese companies on the so-called Entity list, effectively banning them from doing business with American firms.
“In the era of big data and the internet, the flow of each person can be seen clearly,” epidemiologist Li Lanjuan told state broadcaster CCTV during an interview in February.
The renowned scientist compared China’s response to Covid-19 with its reaction to Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), alluding to technological developments that make it easier to track citizens.
“We should make full use of technologies such as these to find and contain the source of infection,” she said.
Epidemic control is a big data problem. Effective management requires officials to find out who has the disease, identify people they have met, and contain those affected to prevent further transmissions. The less the government knows, the more it has to restrict everyday life to stop the spread of disease.
As the infection began to spread, so did panic. And people’s data became collateral damage.
In its fight with the virus, China is collecting unprecedented amounts of data to keep the highly transmissible virus under control. While these efforts were largely improvised during the first few weeks of the outbreak, the surveillance systems are now harvesting personal data with increasing efficiency.
“It is clear that they are collecting very sensitive data, and that they are storing it in databases in several different places, all potentially vulnerable,” Lokman Tsui, assistant professor of journalism at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, told TechNode.
Even in the world’s most digital society, the flu-like virus ran rings around sophisticated surveillance systems. At the beginning of the outbreak, the heavy lifting was done by hand.
In Hubei, the province at the center of the epidemic, health authorities demanded that pharmacies and medical centers report the names, addresses, and ID numbers of people who bought fever and cough medicines after Jan. 20, three days before the province’s capital was locked down. The initiative was an effort to find unreported infections.
As transmissions around the country soared, and existing surveillance mechanisms proved ineffective, the state did the only thing it knew would work: cut off transportation routes and relegate people to their homes.
On Jan. 23, the most extensive quarantine in history was put into effect. Residents of Wuhan, the city at the center of the outbreak, woke to the news that the metropolis of 11 million people had been locked down. No one was allowed out of the city. Trains and flights were canceled. Public transport was shut down.
The cordon sanitaire quickly expanded to include the whole of Hubei—a province of more than 50 million people. Zhejiang, on China’s east coast, later imposed similar measures, along with dozens of villages across the country. What travel was allowed was governed by paper administration. As the outbreak accelerated, officials required travelers to put pen to paper to detail their recent travel history and health status.
Cities around the country demanded residents returning home during the Lunar New Year holiday register their details with authorities in a bid to track down and isolate people who had been to Hubei. Meanwhile, train stations began handing out paper health declarations as millions made trips home to see their loved ones.
The system quickly showed holes. As the infection began to spread, so did panic. And people’s data became collateral damage. Hubei residents found their phone and ID numbers, home addresses, and travel itineraries circulating in chat groups on popular messaging app WeChat. Local officials appear to have leaked the data, and the information spread like wildfire.
China’s telecom providers stepped in, showing the extent to which they can track subscribers.
Those affected took to social media to implore others to stop disseminating their data. “It is illegal to disclose personal information, which seriously violates our legal rights and threatens our personal safety,” one person said on microblogging platform Weibo.
But the damage was done, and people with a connection to Hubei quickly became pariahs in their communities. A number of the people affected by the leaks reported being harassed by phone and WeChat by unknown individuals demanding they “immediately isolate” themselves even if they had shown no symptoms after the 14-day incubation period.
Ten days later, China’s internet watchdog reiterated data collection rules: No using personal information collected to control the epidemic for other purposes. No collecting data from people who aren’t suspected of being infected or who have been diagnosed. No organizations other than those authorized by the National Health Commission were to use Covid-19 as a reason to collect personal data without permission.
After extending the Lunar New Year holiday by more than a week, officials wanted to get people back to work. They needed systems that could filter low and high-risk people. The first solutions used travel histories as a proxy for infection risk; most cities’ rules deemed people safe if they hadn’t moved around the county for two weeks.
China’s telecom providers stepped in, showing the extent to which they can track subscribers. China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom all launched services on Feb. 13 that allow users to get a report of where they have traveled in the previous two weeks based on cell phone tracking.
Users could request an itinerary by SMS listing areas they had visited in the previous two weeks, giving them a way to prove to checkpoint guards they had not visited the worst-affected areas.
It’s unclear how widely and effectively these itineraries are used. When testing the feature shortly after it was rolled out, TechNode found that not all movements between cities were recorded. A correspondent who traveled between Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenzhen over two days found that China Mobile’s system recorded only Shanghai in their itinerary.
Cities also outsourced their health surveillance efforts to employers. In Shanghai, where TechNode’s headquarters are based, the government required companies to collect health information from their employees daily. These firms need to store all their workers’ data. If someone is suspected of infection, their information is handed to authorities.
The aim is simple: To track people’s mobility and regulate their movements based on an assessment of their potential Covid-19 infection risk.
Meanwhile, residential communities began recording information from people arriving and leaving their premises while implementing temperature screening at their gates. Notices appeared on apartment doors requesting those who had been to Hubei report to local authorities and quarantine themselves for two weeks.
Cities also began implementing real-name registration to track the movement of people on local public transport systems. The system is typically used to link online accounts to individual identities, allowing actions to be digitized, categorized, and tracked.
With the help of China’s tech giants, several cities across the country, including southern China’s Shenzhen and the eastern Chinese city of Ningbo, rolled out platforms requiring commuters to register when using the subway, bus systems, and taxis. Passengers scan a QR code that logs their movements and allows the government to identify anyone who has come in contact with someone suspected of being infected.
But paperwork was still a big part of the system, with paper passes controlling access to apartment buildings.
Then, as lockdowns expanded, the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou, 750 kilometers away from the center of the outbreak and home to Alibaba, began hatching a controversial new plan to digitize these passes and replace full-scale lockdowns with targeted quarantines.
Zhejiang province, the second worst-affected area in China, began cutting its cities off from the outside world on Feb. 2, ten days after Wuhan. Soon, just one member of a household was able to leave their apartment every two days.
Working with the government, Alibaba’s fintech affiliate Ant Financial and social media giant Tencent rolled out digital quarantine platforms to alleviate the situation. The systems assign users a rating based on their health status and travel history. Cities are not required to adopt the platforms. Still, Alibaba says they are being used in more than 200 cities across China, effectively functioning as health passports.
The result of the combination of these platforms is a patchwork of systems with different purposes and run by various organizations.
The aim is simple: To track people’s mobility and regulate their movements based on an assessment of their potential Covid-19 infection risk. Users need to self-report their health status, including whether they have any symptoms associated with the virus that has killed nearly 3,300 people in China.
The result is a pass that dictates whether people are free to move around the cities in which they live, or confine themselves to their homes for a specified amount of time. A red pass requires its holder to quarantine themselves at home for 14 days while those rated yellow need to isolate themselves for a week. People with green codes can travel freely, scanning QR codes at residential compounds and supermarkets to track where they have been and update their color pass if needed.
People in Hangzhou were quick to adopt the QR code system, and a broad lockdown of the city was replaced with targeted quarantines.
Alipay’s system is going national, and cities around the country have started accepting health passports issued in other provinces, partially normalizing travel between many cities. But TechNode’s reporting also found significant regional variations in how the system is implemented. In Beijing, for instance, paper passes still take precedence over the health passport platforms. In Shanghai, QR codes are rarely inspected, and checkpoints do not appear to scan codes to generate further data for the system.
Read more: How China is using QR code apps to contain Covid-19
Tencent said during an earnings call last week that its system is currently used by 900 million people in 300 cities across China. “Health Code has become the most used ePass for verifying health and travel history during the outbreak,” said Martin Lau, the company’s executive director and president.
While health data and travel histories are used to drive the QR code system, it is unclear what other types of information are being fed in and used for surveillance. This haziness is causing people to change their behavior.
Across the country, people need to provide identifying information when purchasing such medicine online. Transactions made through delivery services Meituan and Ele.me prompt buyers to provide their ID details if the medication can be used to treat a cough or fever, according to a TechNode investigation.
“We will do our best to protect your personal information security,” reads a disclaimer in Meituan’s app when paying for such medicines. The company says it is required to report the information to epidemic prevention and control authorities.
Meanwhile, many people have avoided using shared bikes following rumors that the data may be shared with the health passports, causing them to change color if they bike near a known case of the virus.
Who has the data?
The result of the combination of these platforms is a patchwork of systems with different purposes and run by various organizations, in which users have little visibility into how data is transmitted, analyzed, and stored. There is no clarity over who developed the algorithms that drive these platforms nor how they work, but also little appeal for those who find themselves disadvantaged.
In March last year, Dutch researchers found an online trove of 364 million social media records.
In a statement to TechNode, an Alibaba spokesperson said that the company acts only as a conduit for health passports, providing a platform for local governments, which run the systems and control users’ data. The company denied having any access to users’ information.
Still, the close relations between the government and a private company have made some uneasy.
“I’m very much against this combination of government and enterprise control of big data,” said one Weibo user of the health passport system. “I’ve been sitting at home for so long that I had to give in [and register],” they added.
Others said that the measures are reminiscent of “The Truman Show,” a 1998 film in which a man’s life is carefully tracked, scrutinized, and broadcast on television.
In addition to these concerns, several high profile data leaks from government-backed surveillance programs over the past year highlight a danger to China’s population.
In March last year, Dutch researchers found an online trove of 364 million social media records that had been mined from WeChat, QQ, and e-commerce giant Taobao’s merchant-customer communications system Wangwang. The data was unsecured and accessible to anyone with a little know-how.
The operation targeted China’s internet cafe users, who are required to register their identities when using such services. The surveillance system collected identity numbers, chat logs, and locations, and sent these details to the police, the researchers said.
In another case, the same researchers found an unsecured database containing the ID and location data of more than 2.5 million people in the northwestern province of Xinjiang. The surveillance database belonged to Sensenets Technology, a Shenzhen-based facial recognition company that has worked with Chinese police in several cities around China.
In China, privacy protection is primarily focused on keeping other companies from accessing the data, not the government, Martin Chorzempa, research fellow at Washington-based think tank the Peterson Institute of International Economics, told TechNode.
“A lot of thinking needs to be done on how this information is shared with local officials while preventing them from unauthorized sharing,” he said.
Increasingly strict data protection regulations require companies to ensure that sensitive personal data remains secure while granting the government access to users’ information should they request it.
Will it ever end?
There are indications that the health passport system could survive the epidemic. An expert quoted by Chengdu Business Daily said he expects health passports to “increase the efficiency and lower costs of healthcare services” even after the outbreak wanes.
According to Patrick Poon, a Hong Kong-based researcher at Amnesty International, the increased data collection and surveillance amid the outbreak sacrifices people’s rights to privacy “for the sake of public health,” adding that the crisis could have been handled better if the government had been more transparent.
Poon highlighted how doctors working in Wuhan who shared information on WeChat in December about a “Sars-like” disease that was beginning to sweep the city were quickly reprimanded and silenced. One such doctor, Li Wenliang, died of the disease on Feb. 6.
“The government will definitely use this as an excuse to enhance surveillance,” said Poon.
Meanwhile, netizens are also worried: “After the outbreak, will the collection of personal information continue?” asked one Weibo user. Several others shared similar concerns.
“In China, that is not an unlikely outcome given its history and culture of surveillance,” said CUHK’s Tsui.
Wide-ranging QR code surveillance will be challenging to implement long term. The tracking process is far from automated, and to get people to scan ubiquitous codes, cities have had to set up checkpoints and deploy legions of guards. Not all cities that have QR codes have made this investment. And even in those that have, enforcement fell off quickly.
Regardless, governments see their response as a vindication of surveillance, and the experience could drive further investments in automated systems.
]]>China’s biggest online travel agencies have reopened booking for domestic holiday packages and attraction tickets after the country’s tourism industry came to a two-month standstill following the outbreak of Covid-19.
Why it matters: Authorities in China are attempting to return the country to a state of normalcy. As a result, online travel platforms could see a spike in demand for domestic destinations as infection rates soar outside of China.
Details: Chinese online travel agencies Ctrip and Qunar have begun presale bookings for domestic packages in April and May, the South China Morning Post reported.
Context: Companies like Ctrip and Qunar have taken a massive hit after the Chinese government imposed citywide lockdowns in the country and countries around the world imposed travel bans on people coming from China.
Nio, the darling of China’s electric vehicle (EV) industry, appeared to teeter on the edge of bankruptcy for months. With no major investments, the company was set for disaster as global markets began melting down over Covid-19. But Nio turned out to have an ace in its pocket: the government.
The company is not alone. China’s government is fighting an uphill battle to keep its electric vehicle (EV) industry afloat. But authorities are now pulling back from an effort to wean the sector from state support.
EV sales in China have plunged after the central government cut subsidies by up to 50% in June. The impact of these cuts was swift and severe. Sales of new energy vehicles (NEVs) dropped by 7% year on year to 8,000 cars in July following growth of 80% in June, marking the first fall in more than two years.
Overall vehicle sales in the country during peak buying season—known as “Golden September” and “Silver October”—did little to boost deliveries. In January, sales plunged by more than half to 44,000 vehicles compared to the same time a year before.
But things were about to get worse. The government had no way of predicting that in just a few months its already flagging EV sector would suffer another major hit when a new flu-like virus began circulating unabated at the turn of the new year.
The virus, coupled with sink-or-swim measures to drive EV companies to innovate, could have devastating effects on EV makers this year.
Bottom line: The government wanted to remove the training wheels from its electric vehicle industry, cutting subsidies and pulling back support, but its plan has backfired and 2020 could be the industry’s worst year yet.
Playing catch up: China was late to car production, lagging behind the US, Japan, and Germany in building gas-driven cars. But the Chinese government saw EVs as an opportunity to catapult itself into pole position to become the driving force behind electrifying mobility.
To achieve this, authorities created incentives for automakers to produce electric vehicles, eventually leading to a regulatory bubble that bred nearly 500 EV companies in the country.
Poor product: Even with subsidies, Chinese consumers have proved suspicious of electric vehicles. Nio hasn’t been immune despite its legions of loyal fans. The company’s sales are still far from being able to support its business.
And dangerous: Safety questions have further hurt consumer confidence. Nio, the poster child of China’s EV sector, last year recalled nearly 5,000 of its flagship ES8 SUVs over a battery fault. At the time, the number made up around a quarter of all its vehicles sold.
Sink or swim: Seeing these problems, authorities decided that EV companies were not innovating fast enough, instead relying on government support to sell their vehicles. The government started scaling back support last year, hoping that competition would force EV makers to address the public concerns and develop Tesla-beating batteries.
In June, the subsidy system saw dramatic cuts, and, at the time, the government hoped to phase them out entirely. Nio and other EV makers were forced to make a difficult decision—absorb the costs or pass them on to their customers.
The fallout: But the subsidy cuts backfired, and apprehension over buying EVs increased. This, coupled with the economic uncertainty from the US-China trade war meant that the EV market took a dramatic turn for the worse. A month after the cuts, Nio’s sales plunged by more than a third, with ES8 deliveries plummeting by 80% to 164 vehicles.
As if it weren’t bad enough without a pandemic: As China worked to get the Covid-19 outbreak under control, cities were brought to a standstill and whole industries shut down. On Jan. 23, just weeks after the virus was first reported in Wuhan, the city was locked down. The measures quickly spread across the country and authorities extended the Lunar New Year holiday, forcing automakers to shut their factories.
U-turn: The dramatic decline in the electric vehicle market has led the government to rethink its approach. Authorities appear to have realized that scaling back support may have been premature and it was unwise to let the industry go it alone. But for Nio, a little help selling cars wouldn’t save the company—it still loses money per car. It needs investors to make payroll.
Local rescue: As Nio looked bound to fail, a local government stepped in. The eastern Chinese city of Hefei saw its chance to raise its own profile while bailing out the poster child of China’s EV market. The near-complete deal will see Nio moving its China headquarters to the city, where it manufactures its vehicles in a partnership with state-owned automaker JAC.
What’s next? EV makers face compounding issues. Aside from a months-long sales slump, these companies now have to contend with the fallout from Covid-19. The virus not only means that companies won’t hit their production targets, but that Chinese consumers will have less spending power over the next few months as a result of the epidemic.
China won’t allow its electric vehicle industry to fail. The government will continue to adjust its policies to ensure success and support the industry, as well as the companies that represent it. Nio’s bailout is just the tip of the iceberg and recent policy changes could foreshadow renewed government support going forward.
The government is already taking additional steps to aid its ailing EV industry. In a recent guideline issued to boost consumption in the country, the central government underlined its efforts to provide financial support to drive EV adoption, as well as rolling out a wider network of charging infrastructure.
Nio claims that it needs just three months to start making money per car. If it’s right, maybe all it needs is more time to turn things around—but its path to sustainability is reliant on getting people to buy its cars, which right now, might be a hard sell.
]]>Artificial intelligence company Sensetime has delayed its plan to go public in Hong Kong, and is instead seeking up to $1 billion in private funding.
Why it matters: Sensetime has faced numerous hurdles since late last year as it laid plans for its initial public offering (IPO). In October, the US blacklisted the company along with several other Chinese AI firms, effectively blocking it from doing business with American companies.
Details: Sensetime is looking to raise between $500 million and $1 billion in private funding from new and existing investors or pre-IPO fundraising, the Nikkei Asian Review reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Context: Sensetime was one of eight Chinese companies blacklisted by the US in October over alleged complicity in Beijing’s human rights violations in China. Megvii, surveillance camera maker Hikvision, and speech recognition firm iFlytek were also included in the export ban.
]]>A Baidu engineer has been sentenced to three years in prison after using the company’s servers to mine cryptocurrency, making a profit of RMB 100,000 ($14,300).
Why it matters: Mining, the process of verifying transactions on a blockchain for reward, is computationally and power-intensive, resulting in high electricity usage.
Details: An Bang, a 31-year-old from northeast China, installed software on 200 of Baidu’s servers between April and July 2018, allowing him to use the computing power to mine Monero.
Context: China last year decided not to ban crypto-mining, removing the activity from a list of those set to be eliminated by the end of 2020.
Stonewise, a Beijing-based platform that uses artificial intelligence (AI) for drug development, has raised nearly $10 million in Series A funding, the company said on Monday.
Why it matters: The Covid-19 pandemic has cast a spotlight on the use of AI in treating and diagnosing diseases, and its potential to quickly discover novel treatments for new and endemic infections.
Details: Stonewise’s latest round of funding was led by Longhill Capital, with the proceeds being used for research and development, optimizing the company’s technology platform, and expanding its technical and management team, the firm said in a statement.
Context: With research centers and operations in North America and China, Stonewise is currently looking to expand globally.
Driverless delivery startup Neolix has raised nearly RMB 200 million ($28.7 million) in Series A+ funding to mass-produce its self-driving vehicles, the company said on Wednesday.
Why it matters: China eased restrictions on delivery robots following the Covid-19 outbreak, resulting in a surge in demand for autonomous deliveries in some of the worst-hit areas.
Details: Neolix’s latest round of funding, which it closed in February and announced this week, is led by electric vehicle maker and existing investor Lixiang. The company is now Neolix’s second-largest shareholder after CEO Yu Enyuan.
Context: While Covid-19 has thrown delivery robots into the spotlight, the technology still faces technical and regulatory hurdles.
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As China ramped up its efforts to counter the spread of Covid-19, delivery robots have garnered newfound attention.
The novel coronavirus, first reported in late December in Wuhan, has now infected more than 80,000 people and killed nearly 3,000 in the country. The government responded by locking down entire cities. On Jan. 23, the largest quarantine measures in history went into effect in Hubei, the province at the center of the outbreak.
This article was originally published in Drive I/O, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on autonomous and electric vehicles. It was co-authored by Chris Udemans.
Beijing has since pledged to increase its support to upgrade the nation’s freight delivery systems. The government also asked companies for solutions to contain the virus, including various forms of “contactless shopping deliveries,” as people around the country became afraid to leave their homes.
At this moment of crisis, some businesses saw opportunities for largely unproven technologies. In an effort to protect the public, lifestyle services giant Meituan and e-commerce firm JD.com started using their unmanned delivery technologies in some of the worst-hit areas.
Just 60% of deliverymen have returned to work in Wuhan since authorities cut the city off from the world. The remainder have been unable to re-enter the city since the lockdown began. Worse still, those in Wuhan have been under both physical and mental pressure from the burgeoning workload and concerns over the epidemic.
With drivers locked in and locked down, the companies had no choice but to experiment with the new tech.
JD’s self-driving robot made its first delivery of medical supplies to Wuhan’s Ninth Hospital on Feb. 6. The facility, designated for treating seriously ill patients, is just 600 meters from a JD distribution center. The close proximity put delivery people at risk of infection, Zhou Jianbin, a district manager of JD Logistics in Wuhan, told The Paper.
The majority of deliveries in Hubei include masks, protective clothing, and other medical supplies. However, the process is not completely automated. JD employees need to place orders in the cars before the deliveries begin. Typically, the robots will alert a user that their delivery is ready for collection and wait 30 minutes for them to collect the goods.
The robots are responsible for half of all daily deliveries, around 10-20 orders each day, according to Zhou. Although only two robots are currently being deployed in the city, JD said it is gradually making a shift to serve the nearly Ninth Hospital with fully driverless delivery.
Due to a significant spike in demand for unmanned deliveries in Wuhan and surrounding cities, the commercial launch of JD’s robot delivery service came well ahead of schedule, said Qi Kong, head of autonomous driving and JD Logistics. The e-commerce giant had initially planned to start mass-producing its driverless vehicles by the end of the year, but now expects to roll out more than 50 robots by the end of April.
A week after JD debuted its robots in Wuhan, Beijing-based Meituan began piloting two driverless delivery robots in the city’s northeastern Shunyi district. Running at just 20 kilometers (12 miles) per hour, the pint-sized vehicles deliver groceries to residents of three neighborhoods within a five-kilometer radius of its pickup station. Each robot delivers up to five orders per trip.
The company did not specify how many orders its autonomous fleet delivers per day. According to Meituan, the robots work as an alternative form of last-mile delivery to help alleviate the shortage of delivery drivers.
The company is also piloting robots at restaurants in Beijing that bring food from kitchens to deliverymen or customers waiting for takeaway meals, in an effort to limit contact between people. The company claims that these robots are not “replacing humans entirely,” as the service currently still requires human-robot collaboration.
While the Covid-19 has offered unmanned delivery providers both government support and an unprecedented opportunity to put their technology through its paces, these companies have had trouble driving adoption of autonomous delivery systems, as regulatory and technological hurdles do still present significant roadblocks to companies such as Meituan and JD.
Regulations governing autonomous driving have long frustrated automakers and tech companies, but the situation is even stickier for unmanned delivery services in China.
To begin with, there is no space on roads dedicated specifically for delivery robots, Zhao Bin, head of public affairs at JD Logistics, told Chinese media in February. Before JD launched its Wuhan Ninth Hospital robot delivery service during the outbreak, the Chinese e-commerce giant had to get hasty approval from government agencies to survey the roads and get maps drawn.
Current Chinese laws are not well-equipped to govern self-driving vehicles, which are not legally allowed to drive on public roads. Various pilot programs are able to operate only because the government issues temporary license plates to approved self-driving companies. Without this permission, the use of these vehicles is illegal and companies must bear all liability for accidents.
The Chinese government has given JD and Meituan permission to run robot deliveries, but many more companies can only run their services in geo-fenced areas such as office parks and school campuses.
Meanwhile, other firms are unable to even get their plans off the ground. According to Chinese media reports, one anonymous self-driving company initially planned to use low-speed driverless vehicles to transport meals from a restaurant in Beijing to a nearby hospital for doctors and patients, but the company eventually had to backtrack on its plans.
Even Baidu, the poster child of China’s self-driving ambitions, only gained lackluster support during the outbreak, deploying just two robots for sterilizing the campuses of two colleges in Wuhan, alongside dozens of others in Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou. The company claimed one of its invested startups began delivering meals to medical staff in Beijing Haidian Hospital starting Feb. 14.
The industry also faces technological challenges. These vehicles currently face enormous limits in their abilities to operate under certain road and weather conditions. The unpredictable nature of traffic and pedestrians, especially when these vehicles attempt to navigate congested roads within residential communities, present significant challenges to wider adoption. A lack of road markings and bad weather further compound these difficulties.
As Bob Zhang, CTO and co-founder of ride-hailing company Didi, has previously made clear, self-driving technology has a long way to go before it can navigate a wide range of weather conditions safety.
Propelled by machine-learning algorithms and a package of hardware that includes various sensing technologies, a delivery service robot can be quite expensive, with prices starting at RMB 100,000 ($14,220). Fortunately, the cost has declined significantly over the past several years; in the early years of development, JD said in 2017, the outlay (in Chinese) could be as much as RMB 600,000 per robot.
This price tag contrasts sharply with the pay of delivery workers, which ranges from RMB 5,000 to RMB 8,000 per month, according to public information on Chinese job recruiting platforms.
Covid-19 has revealed the potential value that autonomous deliveries can play in emergency situations. As Chinese citizens avoided infection by engaging in voluntary isolation, legions of food and grocery delivery drivers became a lifeline, providing a fresh supply of food to millions around the country.
However, there were limits. Many migrant delivery workers had made their yearly trek across the country to their hometowns, leading to a dearth of drivers in major urban centers. With fewer drivers available, deliveries that usually took 30 minutes might now be completed in around two hours.
Costs also increased. In Shanghai, for example, Alibaba’s Hema supermarket charged an additional RMB 6 for deliveries that had previously been free of charge.
The coronavirus outbreak also led to fears over close contact with delivery drivers, who had the potential to unknowingly spread infection to an untold number of other people. In response, companies launched “contactless delivery,” in which orders were left at the entrance of apartment complexes. The model had already been in use at office buildings before the outbreak, but quickly became ubiquitous as the outbreak continued.
In Hubei, the center of the epidemic, the government placed restrictions on deliveries to limit people’s exposure to the disease. Residents in small towns had to contact their party committees to get fresh food and supplies.
Delivery robots could provide a solution to these problems, and are poised to play an important role in China’s logistics industry. In less than a decade, autonomous vehicles will deliver 80% of all goods, according to the research firm McKinsey. These vehicles could increase efficiency and cut expenses in an industry where last-mile deliveries can constitute up to 12% of costs.
Xia Huaxia, Meituan’s chief scientist, told TechNode last year that machines can also be used to complement the work of delivery people by taking night shifts or working during extreme weather conditions. If a delivery robot’s lifespan is more than three years, he said, the cost of the machine will be lower than the cost of human labor.
Observers expect China’s food-delivery market to explode in the next few years. Meituan, which employed 600,000 drivers as of late last year, predicts that its daily orders will increase by 200% per day. According to Xia, in the second half of 2019, the delivery giant completed 25 million orders every day.
]]>A little-known Chinese company said that it has developed a facial recognition technology that can identify people in a crowd wearing face masks, as people around the country don the protective gear to reduce their risk of Covid-19 infection.
Why it matters: Tech companies have been working on facial recognition software that can identify people with very little facial data.
Details: Beijing-based Hanwang Technology said that it has developed facial recognition capabilities that can identify every masked person in a crowd of up to 30 people within a second, Reuters reported.
Context: Several Chinese companies have touted their abilities to identify people wearing masks since the beginning of the outbreak.
Autonomous truck startup TuSimple has expanded its partnership with UPS, doubling the number of delivery runs its vehicles make for the American logistics company per week.
Why it matters: The extended alliance between the two companies is a vote of confidence for TuSimple, which aims to transform the country’s $800 billion trucking industry with fully autonomous rigs.
Details: TuSimple will increase the number of trips it makes for UPS to 20 runs per week, adding an additional 10 trips on a new route between Phoenix and El Paso, Texas, the company said in a statement on Thursday.
Context: The logistics industry could see increased efficiency by using autonomous trucks as more people do their shopping online, putting increased strain on freight companies.
Cybersecurity company Qihoo 360 has accused the CIA of targeting China’s government and several of the country’s critical industries in a decade-long espionage campaign.
Why it matters: The claim comes just weeks after the US charged four Chinese military officers over the 2017 Equifax breach in which hackers stole personal data, including names and addresses, belonging to 147 million Americans.
Details: Qihoo said on Monday that between 2008 and 2019 the US may have acquired China’s “most classified business information.”
Context: Chinese organizations are becoming increasingly vocal about reported attacks against the country by others.
China is working to streamline domestic travel using its controversial high-tech quarantine apps, as numerous provinces in eastern China begin to cooperate with one another in recognizing Health Code systems from other areas.
Why it matters: Provincial governments around the country have rolled out Health Code platforms to track people’s mobility and regulate their movements based on an assessment of their potential Covid-19 infection risks.
Details: Zhejiang, the first place to roll out such a system, along with other eastern Chinese provinces Jiangsu and Anhui, as well as the neighboring municipality of Shanghai are working to recognize one another’s Health Codes so people from these areas can travel around the Yangtze River Delta Economic Zone with fewer restrictions, Hangzhou Daily reported.
Context: The agreement highlights China’s urgency in getting people back to work, especially those who have not yet returned to the cities in which they are employed.
Search giant Baidu’s profits ballooned in the fourth quarter but the company warned of flagging revenue during the first three months of 2020 as a result of economic uncertainty from the novel coronavirus outbreak.
Why it matters: Baidu has seen mounting competition from companies like Bytedance and Tencent which have been enticing advertisers and Chinese consumers with their short video and social apps.
Details: Baidu’s Q4 revenue reached RMB 28.9 billion, up 6% year on year, the company said in a statement on Thursday, beating analysts’ expectations of RMB 28.4 billion.
Context: A deadly new coronavirus, dubbed Covid-19, has had a profound impact on most businesses in China, as the government prolonged the Lunar New year holiday to prevent the spread of the disease and consumers slash spending.
Shanghai will become the latest city to roll out real-name registration for commuters taking the subway, following a slew of other metropolises implementing identity checks on public transport.
Why it matters: China has turned to apps to track and prevent the spread of Covid-19, a new flu-like virus that has killed nearly 2,750 people.
Details: Starting on Friday, commuters in Shanghai will be encouraged to scan a QR code in their subway car after boarding. Passengers will then be prompted to confirm their mobile phone numbers, according to Shanghai Metro’s official WeChat account.
Context: The southern city of Shenzhen and eastern China’s Ningbo rolled out similar systems last week, which in some cases apply to buses and taxis. The system in these cities is developed by gaming and social media giant Tencent.
This article has been corrected to reflect that registration in Shanghai is currently not mandatory.
]]>This article was co-authored by David Cohen and Chris Udemans.
As China goes back to work after weeks of epidemic lockdown, it’s betting on high-tech QR code quarantines to keep the virus from spreading.
In the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou, scanning a QR code at a checkpoint with Alipay has become a routine part of daily life. It’s essentially a health passport for the city. A mini-app embedded in Alipay or WeChat rates people as red, yellow, or green risks. To enter an apartment complex or a market, residents must scan a QR code at a manned checkpoint, letting the system know where they are and producing a one-time color code pass to show the guard.
Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejiang province, became the first to adopt the QR code system on Feb. 11, although lockdown continued for most residents until Feb. 15. Alipay announced on Feb. 16 that it was ramping up development support for a national health code system that assesses individuals for self-quarantine based on basic health information and travel history, which it is preparing to launch this week under the guidance of the State Council, China’s cabinet.
In a statement provided after publication of this article, Alibaba said that ratings are provided by government, not the company, using Alipay as a platform. Referring to widespread references in Chinese media to an “Alipay health code,” the company said: “It is marketing language used for promoting usage. In reality, these are not Alipay-issued health codes, but rather are issued by governments.”
By Feb. 20, Alipay boasted that platforms it had helped develop were already in use in over 100 cities, including all cities in Zhejiang, Sichuan, and Hainan, as well as Chongqing.
According to our observations, there is no place that enforces the health passport system as rigorously as in Zhejiang.
But national implementation doesn’t mean a unified national system—instead, each participating city is launching a local version of the system, creating a fragmented landscape resembling local social credit system pilots. Some have versions of Alipay’s system, some have local apps—and others have both. While online tracking ended Hangzhou’s total lockdown, many other cities have not revised quarantine rules to reflect new online systems.
As of Feb. 25, sources on the ground described very limited implementation outside Alipay’s home province of Zhejiang, ranging from paper-based lockdown in Shanghai to laxly enforced digital checkpoints in Shenzhen. Talking to locals in cities that have adopted health passport systems, TechNode saw its limits: the app alone does nothing without human-based enforcement and public compliance, and few cities outside Zhejiang have overcome these human challenges.
The system shows both how much is possible with high-tech surveillance—and how much human input is required to make such systems work.
To register, individuals provide their name, ID number, phone number. The health-rating platform, asks a series of questions, including physical health condition and whether the individual has traveled to virus-hit areas or has come into contact with infected cases, to produce an initial rating. These ratings are reported to change, likely informed by where the user has checked in and new reports of infections.
According to Hangzhou rules, residents with a green code are allowed to move around the city freely. Yellow means a seven-day quarantine is required, and red requires a 14-day quarantine. Some versions adopt a slightly different color-coding system, but the general idea is the same—to track mobility and regulate it based on risk assessments. Though the questionnaires record self-reported information, public data is used for verification purposes.
Internet users have questioned the way the system analyzes health and travel data. In numerous accounts on microblogging platform Weibo, netizens said people living in the same household were given different color codes even though they had been isolated together for weeks.
Others have expressed frustration with unpredictability, saying they were initially given a green code only to have it change to red after a few days. The colors are dynamic, and some people taking what they believe to be adequate measures to protect themselves while outdoors have had their mobility limited after their code changed color.
While Alipay’s version is associated with a State Council project, local governments are not required to adopt it. WeChat operator Tencent is working with the State Information Center to develop similar QR code-passed health passports.
Tencent’s version, called “Tencent Healthcare Code,” is already available in provinces including Guangdong, Sichuan, and Yunnan.
While the system has the potential to bring a semblance of normal life back to places that have been locked down for weeks due to the outbreak, to create a surveillance system capable of tracking 1.4 billion people everywhere they go comes at great challenges and costs.
Uny Cao, a resident of Hangzhou, says that he scans twice a day—once when he goes to the vegetable market, and once when he returns home. Getting on the subway, riding a bus, or going to a park would mean more scans, so he’s chosen to limit these behaviors. Many also avoid borrowing share bikes, reasoning that the apps may share data with the Health Code:
“A few days ago, they found a new case in City North. Rumor spread that if you have rented a shared bike in that region, your code might get a downgrade,” he said. “So for those few days, I avoided renting shared bikes, in case they discover a new patient in my area.”
According to our observations, there is no place that enforces the health passport system as rigorously as in Zhejiang.
Regular scans both track and shape behavior. Sources told TechNode that citizens are required to show their code to be scanned when entering supermarkets and residential areas as well as getting on the subway and buses.
For Hangzhou residents, the inconveniences are a small price for something like normal life—for the ten days before the app launched, the city was forced to stay indoors except for short trips to buy food every other day. Since the code system came in, residents have been allowed to leave their homes and even to drive to other cities.
Even here, enthusiasm has its limits: While apartment buildings and food markets appear to be rigorously enforcing the rules, TechNode correspondents have walked into banks past napping checkpoint guards. Restaurants and smaller shops are starting to re-open without check-in systems.
The Hangzhou version of the mini-app, which the national version will reportedly be based on, allows non-Hangzhou residents and foreigners to register. Other places such as Shanghai and Shenzhen’s platform only allows residents to apply for a pass.
The Hangzhou health passport works for long-distance travel. When a TechNode correspondent traveled from Shanghai to Hangzhou, train station staff checked travelers’ health codes and wrote down their ID numbers. Travelers who had applied for codes outside of Hangzhou had no problems entering the city.
Beyond Hangzhou, enforcement can be more lax. In Jinhua, a city in Zhejiang 180 kilometers south of Hangzhou, a 25-year-old city resident told TechNode that she only needs to use the system when taking public transport. Her local supermarkets and residential community do not check the color of her QR code when she leaves her apartment. The system is enforced more stringently for out-of-towners, she said.
In a rural area, quarantine guards suggested a TechNode correspondent write down an ID number on a piece of paper to save time registering with a local version of the color codes mini-app.
But other cities can enforce non-app limits far more strictly, suggesting that they do not fully trust the app: A resident in the eastern Chinese city of Ningbo says there are checkpoints set up at community complexes and supermarkets. People are being asked to show, but not scan, their QR code at public places. On top of enforcing the new health code system at the community level, the previous lockdown rules still apply, the Ningbo resident said. In her apartment compound, residents are required to show the QR code at the entrance of the complex and still adhere to the rule that every household can only send one person out every two days.
The source also said her relative purposely left out the fact that he just came back from Wuhan when filling out the questionnaire. The police called days later and ask why he didn’t report it. They found the license plate under his name had been in Wuhan recently.
For people that have returned to their work, they have to show the QR code when leaving the apartment complex and also show a document from their employer that permits them to return to work.
TechNode sources described health passport systems that were implemented either spottily or not at all. In some places, including Shanghai, Beijing, and central China’s Hubei, the worst-hit province in the country, apps were superseded by strict offline measures; in others, such as Guangdong, quarantine appears to be lax.
More than a week after launching a track-everything health code system, Shanghai is still very much relying on paper records to enforce a 14-day quarantine on all new arrivals. Shanghai launched health passports as a new feature within its pre-existing “Health Cloud” mini-app on Feb. 17, accessible on Alipay and WeChat. But TechNode correspondents could not find a place to scan the app inside the city, finding checkpoints at office buildings and apartment complexes relying on paper records and paper cards or stickers to identify approved residents or workers.
In Shenzhen, the headquarter of internet giant Tencent, sources say that the health code system has been mostly ignored as the city hurries to get back to work.
Henk Werner, head of Shenzhen-based hardware incubator Trouble Maker, told TechNode that he and his friends had not bothered to register for the local version unless they wanted to take the subway. Residents are being asked to show QR codes at places like the parking lot of an apartment complex, but found it possible to bypass the checkpoint. Another source in Shenzhen says she hasn’t bothered to register—and that she’s going to work by taxi every day with a paper pass.
The central city of Xi’an has used a more limited pass system that requires scan check-ins but does not display a color code for about a week. Graduate student Liu Weiqi and TechNode editor Wang Boyuan both described checkpoints at the entrances to apartment compounds, but saw mixed use of the app. While Wang saw people using the app to enter his apartment compound, Liu made a trip to the market by bus on Feb. 25, and found that in practice he was registered on paper records everywhere but the market. On Feb. 25, the city announced that it is adopting a version of Alipay’s color code-based pass app.
A source in Chengdu said even though the city implemented a health passport on Feb. 21, it’s not enforced. Residents can go out without being asked to show the code. She said it’s probably because the area she lives in is mostly locals rather than out-of-towners, who are seen as being a higher risk.
At the epicenter of the outbreak, attempts to roll out the health check system have also had limited effect, simply because no one is going out to be checked. Earlier this week Wuhan, the city at the epicenter of the Covid-19 outbreak, launched a Tencent version of the health passport. The local government now recommends residents who need to leave their apartment complex for valid reasons to apply for the pass.
Wu Chuan, a 26-year-old resident of Yichang, a city in Hubei that is approximately a four-hour drive from Wuhan, told TechNode he hasn’t stepped out of his home for close to a month and wasn’t aware of any health passport platform in Hubei.
The city has a strictly enforced health-reporting system that requires citizens to fill out an application if they plan to leave the community complex. Without official approval, they’re forbidden to do so. Wu said the health passport system does not seem to have much use in his city because, unlike Hangzhou and other metropoles that actually allow people out and go about their usual activities, it is still under lockdown.
Suizhou, a city 180 kilometers northeast of Wuhan, has also begun implementing a health passport system. People with green codes will need to have their temperatures checked before being allowed through checkpoints. Those with yellow and red codes will not be permitted to pass. The system is not yet mandatory and a resident of the city told TechNode that she is still not allowed to leave her residential community.
It is unclear whether the implementation will improve after the launch of the national version of the health code this week. Although it is a standardized system across the country, according to Alipay, local governments have the liberty to decide whether they want to adopt the version of not.
In order for the system to work, cities need to deploy checkpoints on highways and roads, on public transportation, and apartment complexes—which requires tremendous manpower to operate. Then they need to supervise these guards closely enough to make sure they do the work.
Hangzhou under the watchful eye of an app shows us what an extreme version of mass surveillance might look like. But it also shows how far we are from that world—it takes a lot more than the click of a button to know where people are.
This article was edited Feb. 26 to include comment from Alibaba.
]]>Artificial intelligence firm Megvii’s application to list on the Hong Kong stock exchange has lapsed six months after the company filed its paperwork for a listing on the city’s bourse.
Why it matters: The Alibaba-backed startup has faced several hurdles as the company attempts to go public. Megvii was blacklisted in the US along with several of its Chinese counterparts, effectively banning it from doing business with American companies without permission.
Details: Megvii’s IPO status was listed as “lapsed” on the Hong Kong stock exchange’s website on Tuesday. IPO applications are required to be finalized within six months of their submission date.
Context: Megvii is one of several companies spearheading China’s AI boom. Others include Sensetime, Yitu, and Cloudwalk, though none have yet gone public.
The US has approved an application by speech recognition firm iFlytek to exempt the company from a months-long trade ban in order to buy medical supplies.
Why it matters: An epidemic of a new flu-like virus dubbed Covid-19 has killed nearly 2,600 people in China after appearing in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year. The outbreak has resulted in medical supply shortages around the country with hospitals in several major cities appealing to the public for donations.
Details: iFlytek applied for an exemption on Feb. 7 to make “charitable donations” of medical supplies that it was restricted from buying in the US as a result of the ban. The US Department of Commerce has subsequently approved the request, iFlytek said in a filing to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on Monday.
Context: China’s tech sector mobilized its resources to curb the spread of the infection. Meituan, Alibaba, and Tencent, among other companies, have made donations exceeding RMB 3 billion ($429 million).
Artificial intelligence firm Laiye has raised $42 million in Series C funding, the company announced on Monday. The round comes as Chinese startups scramble for cash amid a new flu-like epidemic that has swept the country.
Why it matters: Fundraising by Chinese startups has this year slumped by around 60% year on year to $1.8 billion. The number of deals has fallen to 168 from 440 at the same time, according to data from consultancy Preqin.
Details: Laiye’s Series C is co-led by Lightspeed Venture Partners and Lightspeed China Partners, the company said on Monday.
Context: Laiye last year merged with Awesome Technology to launch UiBot, an RPA platform that allows companies to automate rule-based operations that the company claims will “significantly improve operational efficiency,” while decreasing labor costs.
]]>An increasing number of cities around China are requiring commuters to register their identities when using public transport, as the country ramps up efforts to contain the spread of a deadly new flu-like virus.
Why it matters: Real-name registration was previously used for transport between cities. Its expansion to intracity transport is an attempt to track the possible spread of the virus.
Details: Commuters in the southern city of Shenzhen and east China’s Ningbo are required to log their identities by scanning a QR code before boarding various kinds of public transport.
Context: Cities around China have taken stringent measures to curb the spread of the virus while still allowing public transport to run. Transportation in the worst-affected areas has been shut down.
Sensetime has launched a series of free online educational tools allowing Chinese students to learn about artificial intelligence, as schools around the country resort to using online classes amid a virus outbreak that has rocked the country.
Why it matters: An epidemic of a flu-like virus dubbed Covid-19 has killed more than 2,000 people in China. The outbreak has resulted in extended closures for schools well beyond the Spring Festival holiday.
Details: Sensetime will offer complimentary videos for AI-focused online classes, an interactive platform for learning to program and practicing AI theories, and courses for educators to learn how to teach the content, the company said in a statement on Monday.
“AI applications have made contributions to the prevention and control of the epidemic—in terms of screening, diagnosing and monitoring the disease through data analytics. With the rapid adoption of AI technologies in various industries, we see a rising demand for AI talents.”
—Lynn Dai, general manager of Sensetime’s education business
Context: Sensetime is not the only company offering free online classes as a result of the outbreak. Vipkid pledged to offer free classes to children between the ages of four and 12.
Last year, when a leading automotive industry body predicted that a prolonged slump in electric vehicle sales would end in 2020, it had no way of knowing what was in store as China prepared for its Lunar New Year celebrations.
The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) predicted in late December that sales of new energy vehicles this year would be no less than 1.2 million cars, the same number sold last year.
This article was originally published in Drive I/O, TechNode’s biweekly newsletter on autonomous and electric vehicles. It was co-authored by Jill Shen.
Just a few weeks earlier, however, people in Wuhan, the capital of central China’s Hubei province, began falling victim to a mysterious respiratory illness. Cases of the disease, now known to be a new coronavirus—belonging to the same family as SARS, MERS, and the common cold—have ballooned. The virus has since spread to every region in China, but infection rates show no signs of abating.
China’s electric vehicle industry now faces compounding difficulties. As the country attempts to stop the spread of the infection, authorities have taken far-reaching measures that could have an implosive effect on the country’s economy, as well as its already-flagging EV market.
Just days before the Spring Festival, the government took the unprecedented step of locking down entire cities in Hubei province, effectively quarantining more than 50 million people. Similar measures have also been implemented in eastern China’s Zhejiang province.
In addition, 11 of China’s 31 provinces have extended the holiday by more than a week to prevent further infections. (The New Year’s holiday began on January 23 and was originally due to end on January 31.) In the commercial hubs of Guangdong and Zhejiang provinces as well as Shanghai, authorities have announced that non-essential businesses should only return to work on February 10.
“These provinces alone are normally responsible for over two-thirds of vehicle production in China,” IHS Markit said in a note.
The research firm now expects that measures will result in a first-quarter production loss of about 350,000 vehicles, down 7% year-on-year. If quarantine measures are imposed until mid-March, that number could increase to 1.7 million units, IHS said. Beijing has set sales goals of 2 million NEVs this year, up 40% compared to 2019.
Should the second figure prove sound, the overall market decline could lead to a shortfall of around 85,000 NEVs for the year, or around 7% of all NEVs sold in 2019, according to TechNode’s calculations.
“How this plays out will be determined by the even more opaque second-round indirect effects on the economy, income growth, and consumer confidence, and thus on the severity of impact on auto sales in the coming months,” IHS said of the overall auto market.
As various provinces prolong the holiday, factories in a number of cities have yet to open their doors, which could put strain on the global automotive supply chain.
“If this situation continues, supply chains will be disrupted. There are forecasts that predict the peak for infections will drag on until February or March,” Reuters quoted Volkmar Denner, CEO of Bosch, the world’s largest automotive supplier, as saying.
Bosch has 23 manufacturing facilities in China, two of which are located in Wuhan.
Bosch isn’t alone. Since the government announced the measure to curb the spread of the virus, the production of vehicles, both electric and gas-driven, has slowed dramatically. Toyota, which sells hybrid vehicles in China, said all its factories in the country would remain closed until February 9, in line with transport lockdowns.
Meanwhile, Honda and Renault, which both have factories with Chinese automaker Dongfeng, will open their factories in Wuhan on February 10. Both companies offer electric cars in the Chinese market.
Other EV makers, including Tesla and Nio, are no less vulnerable to the effects of the outbreak. The Shanghai government has required that the US automaker shut down its production plant in the city until the end of this week. Nio’s vehicles are produced by state-owned carmaker JAC in eastern China’s Anhui province, which has also extended the holiday over coronavirus concerns.
During an earnings call last week, Tesla CFO Zach Kirkhorn said that the shutdown would have minimal effects on the company’s profitability. Nevertheless, Bernstein analysts said that around 82% of Tesla’s retail volume in China comes from the 40 worst-hit cities, while those cities make up 68% of Nio’s sales.
“The latter looks especially vulnerable to a prolonged slump in EV sales,” the analysts said. “We expect EV sales in China to be worse hit than the broader market. Consumer adoption of EVs in China is highly concentrated in the top cities where license plate restrictions and other policies enforce EV purchases.
As the number of confirmed cases of the new virus surges, global automakers and Chinese OEMs have scrambled to make big donations to fight against the outbreak while also burnishing their images. At the time of writing, more than 45 automakers, Tier 1 suppliers, and large auto dealers have provided donations worth RMB 500 million (about $70 million).
BMW, the top premium car seller in China last year, was the first to act—offering RMB 5 million in aid. Chinese auto giant Geely gave a lavish RMB 200 million, with dozens of minivans for medical transport. Meanwhile, state-owned FAW and GAC ramped up support with follow-on donations of RMB 30 million and RMB 8 million, respectively. Even loss-making EV makers including Nio and Xpeng have joined the ranks of generous donors.
Meanwhile, Tesla found itself riding a wave of public outrage. The company initially “did its bit,” according to Zhu Xiaotong, president of Tesla Greater China, by offering Tesla owners free unlimited access to its supercharging network until the epidemic was over. This, however, generated sharp criticism among both followers and critics.
“No donation from Tesla? … Even Nio, a company near bankruptcy, offered several million yuan … Will Tesla do nothing in China other than making money?” wrote a user with the handle “Sailamborghini,” commenting on a post by Tesla on microblogging platform Weibo.
“[You] might as well donate some US-made face masks,” another user using the handle “Xiele-.” Two days later, the American EV giant announced a donation of RMB 5 million for virus control to mollify public anger.
Donations are a form of relief not just for those stricken with the illness but for the companies themselves, given the possible impact on the domestic and global auto market and supply chain if the situation in China gets worse. Currently, the Chinese government allows businesses to deduct donations from taxable income, without exceeding 12% of their annual net profit. Ren, the Evergrande economist, has suggested removing the restriction to boost donations and stabilize the economy.
]]>Search giant Baidu has released an open-source tool to detect whether individuals in crowds are wearing face masks, as cities around the country impose rules requiring use of such protection in public spaces.
Why it matters: Authorities in China have taken drastic measures to curb the spread of Covid-19, a new flu-like virus that first appeared in the central Chinese city of Wuhan late last year.
Details: The face-scanning model uses artificial intelligence to identify people in real-time who are not wearing masks or those who are wearing them incorrectly, Baidu said on Thursday.
Context: Face masks have become a necessity in China, where nearly 1,400 people have died as a result of the infection.
China’s internet regulator has emphasized the need for effective data protection amid the ongoing Covid-19 epidemic as public concern over the misuse of their data grows.
Why it matters: The new flu-like virus has killed 1,367 and infected more than 50,000 people since it was first reported in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late December.
Details: The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) said this week that no organizations other than those authorized by the National Health Commission may use Covid-19 as a reason to collect personal data without permission.
Context: Stigma surrounding people from the worst-affected areas of China has spread, resulting in whole villages shutting themselves off from outside visitors.
Search giant Baidu has released a tool allowing people to determine risk levels for infection by Covid-19, a new flu-like virus that has swept China over the past month.
Why it matters: The number of deaths from the disease reached 1,100 on Wednesday, with nearly 44,000 people infected.
DingTalk, WeChat Work overburdened as hundreds of millions work remotely
Details: The Covid-19 Intelligent Self-Test Tool (our translation) uses the Chinese government’s diagnosis and treatment plan for the virus as well as records from millions of online medical consultations to assess whether a user is at low, moderate, or high risk of having caught the bug.
Context: China’s tech sector has mobilized against the virus, with numerous companies launching tools to help the public stay informed and safe during the epidemic.
Speech recognition firm iFlytek has applied for an exemption to a US trade ban in order to buy medical supplies amid a national campaign to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus.
Why it matters: More than 900 people have died as a result of the infection, which was first reported in Wuhan, the capital of China’s central Hubei province, in late December. Medical supply shortages have been reported across the country, with hospitals in several cities requesting donations from the public.
Details: iFlytek seeks to make “charitable donations” of medical supplies that it is currently restricted from buying in the US as a result of the ban, the company said in a filing to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange on Monday.
Context: China has mobilized its tech sector in an effort to curb the spread of the infection. Dozens of companies including Meituan, Alibaba, and Tencent have made donations in excess of RMB 3 billion ($429 million), while also deploying their technologies in applications ranging from diagnosis to tracking the spread of the disease.
Chinese internet security experts claim that South Asian state-backed hackers are targeting China’s medical sector as the country struggles to keep up with ballooning infections from a new flu-like epidemic that is sweeping the country. Researchers at the Chinese internet security giant Qihoo 360 made the claim in a Feb. 4 blog post.
Why it matters: More than 28,000 people have been infected with the deadly novel coronavirus that emerged in the central Chinese city of Wuhan in late December.
The researchers condemn the attacks as a threat to China’s efforts to control the epidemic:
“It can be said that epidemic warfare is closely linked to cyberspace warfare, and cyberspace has become another important battlefield for epidemic warfare.”
–Qihoo 360 researchers
Details: Qihoo identifies the hackers as members of a South Asian advanced persistent threat (APT) group. APT groups are typically state-backed organizations that access private information for a prolonged period while remaining largely undetected.
Context: Qihoo 360 is one of several companies that have reported a rise in the number of coronavirus-related phishing campaigns.
Personal data for residents of Chinese cities at the center of a ballooning coronavirus outbreak are being spread online, as the stigma surrounding people from the worst-affected areas grows.
Why it matters: More than 17,000 people in China have been infected with a new coronavirus, which was first reported in late December in Wuhan, capital of Hubei province in central China. The epidemic, which had killed 361 people in the country as of Monday morning, has resulted in widespread panic and uncertainty as the rate of new infections shows no sign of abating.
Details: Hubei residents have found information including their phone and ID numbers, home addresses, and travel itineraries circulating in chat groups on popular messaging app WeChat, Sina reported.
“It is illegal to disclose personal information, which seriously violates our legal rights and threatens our personal safety.”
—Weibo user Miyanlushe, who studies in Wuhan
Context: Stigma surrounding those from Wuhan has grown as the coronavirus spreads, with villages around China isolating themselves from outside visitors.
US tech giant Apple handed over more user account data to authorities in China than any other country in the first half of 2019, according to the company’s biannual transparency report.
Why it matters: Apple’s report details the number of times governments around the world request information about the company’s users.
“Account-based requests generally seek details of customers’ iTunes or iCloud accounts, such as a name and address; and in certain instances customers’ iCloud content, such as stored photos, email, iOS device backups, contacts or calendars.”
—Apple’s transparency report
Details: Between Jan. 1 and June 30 last year China’s government petitioned for information relating to nearly 15,700 user accounts in 25 separate requests. Due to US regulations, Apple can only release transparency data six months after a reporting period.
Context: The number of accounts included in China’s requests has more than doubled compared with the second half of 2018, while compliance rates have fallen by 2 percentage points from 98%.
Researchers from artificial intelligence startup Sensetime have created the “largest” benchmark for deepfake detectors, allowing developers to train and test systems that attempt to identify face forgeries.
Why it matters: Used to manipulate media using artificial intelligence to create realistic-looking videos, images, or sounds, deepfake technology has sparked concerns that applications including facial recognition systems could be fooled, leading to compromised personal data. In popular cases, celebrities’ faces have been superimposed on bodies that are not their own.
“The popularization of ‘deepfakes’ on the internet has further set off alarm bells among the general public and authorities, in view of the conceivable perilous implications. Accordingly, there is a dire need for countermeasures to be in place promptly, particularly innovations that can effectively detect videos that have been manipulated.”
—Researchers from Sensetime and Nanyang Technological University
Details: Sensetime Research created the benchmark, dubbed Deeper-Forensics-1.0, along with Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University. The researchers claim the dataset is 10 times larger than others of its kind, consisting of 60,000 videos made up of 17.6 million frames.
Context: Deepfakes gained widespread attention in China in September when popular face-swapping platform Zao was thrust into the spotlight over privacy issues. Released on August 31, the app quickly went viral in China before its policies allowing excessive data collection were publicized. Zao quickly became a sensation, with its servers hitting maximum capacity on the day of its launch.
China’s securities watchdog has approved an application from chipmaker Rockchip to list on the Shanghai bourse, as the company taps the capital markets following an unsuccessful attempt to go public three years ago.
Why it matters: Founded in 2001, Rockchip failed to list on Shenzhen’s ChiNext board in 2017 for “critical sales stagnation and asset decline,” according to China Money Network.
Details: Based in the eastern Chinese city of Fuzhou, Rockchip has launched a series of artificial intelligence (AI) chips since its failed listing.
Context: Rockchip produces chips for handheld devices including tablets and smartphones, as well as TV boxes, IoT hardware, and is looking to tap the smart speaker market.
The US government plans to terminate one of its largest civilian drone programs over concerns that devices at least partially made in China may be used for spying, the Financial Times reports, citing two people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: Chinese-made civilian drones have become a focal point for the US government, as officials warn that Beijing could use photos taken with onboard cameras for intelligence purposes.
Details: The US Department of Interior will ground its nearly 1,000 drones after determining that they pose an unacceptable level of risk as Beijing could be using the devices for spying.
US Interior Department to ground Chinese-made drones: report
Context: Against the backdrop of the US-China trade war, Washington has sought to limit US exposure to Chinese technology.
Editor’s note: This post about Tencent investments originally appeared in our members’ only weekly newsletter, accompanying Elliot Zaagman’s analysis of Tencent’s global investment strategy published here. Sign up and read it first.
Tencent has an interesting investment strategy. In every sector except gaming, they spread their bets, usually taking only a 20% stake. However, as we discovered, that strategy still has room for variation. In preparation for Elliott Zaagman’s analysis of their investment strategy, we collected, cleaned, and visualized the publicly available data on how the tech major deploys its money.
One pattern was very clear: in relatively mature markets (US and India) they prefer to make a lot of small bets at the early stage. In immature markets (Southeast Asia and Africa), they go with larger players at later stages.
Our hypothesis: mature markets have already been won so it makes more sense to invest in smaller, but potentially disruptive companies. In immature markets, where they have less expertise and the market is still rapidly developing, it makes more sense to invest in companies who have already won or are about to. No matter which market, however, Tencent only likes making acquisitions in the gaming space, where it still garners the biggest proportion of revenue.
The data present is incomplete, though. We only included investments with publicly available funding data. Even then, we still don’t have exact figures on how much Tencent invested, no matter if they were led or followed-on. In addition, we don’t include the value of acquisitions, mostly of gaming companies (for gaming acquisitions, PC Gamer has a helpful overview). Elliott’s piece, the data he gathered and that we present below, is just one way of interpreting the data. If you have other interpretations, we’d be glad to hear them.
—John Artman, Editor in Chief
Data security startup DataCloak has closed its Series A worth $13 million, the company announced on Tuesday.
Why it matters: China hopes to create a cybersecurity industry worth RMB 200 billion ($28.7 billion) by 2025, with a handful of domestic companies taking on their international counterparts.
“We will continue to increase investment in research and development, consolidate the core advantages of independent intellectual property rights, and provide customers with better products and innovation.”
—Liu Chao, DataCloak CEO, in a statement
The Chinese startup using AI to keep sensitive data confidential
Details: DataCloak’s latest round of funding was led by Jeneration Capital, Co-Stone Asset Management, and Green Pine Capital Partners. Previous investor Matrix Partners China also took part.
Context: Founded in 2018 by a former senior senior director and engineers from Baidu, Shenzhen-based Datacloak employs “zero-trust” computing, in which users are not trusted only because they have access to a corporate network.
Data security startup DataCloak is using artificial intelligence (AI) and “zero-trust” computing to give companies greater control over their sensitive information to combat internal and external threats.
The backstory: Founded in early 2018 by a former senior director and engineers from search giant Baidu, DataCloak provides solutions to ensure sensitive data remains confidential.
Unique selling point: DataCloak wants to allow employees of an enterprise to securely access corporate data wherever they are in the world. They do this by combining multiple technologies that allow for increased control over who can access privileged information.
“We try to protect the owners of data during the whole data lifecycle, from generation to transformation, as well as the data flow. This could be the source code from a software company, it could be users’ private data held by banks, or even invoices or customer lists. We don’t trust based on where you are; we don’t trust you based on our account name; we don’t trust a laptop purely because it’s distributed by your company. We use a ‘don’t trust, always verify’ approach”
—Cui Yongxin, chief operating officer of DataCloak
The investors: DataCloak has attracted attention from Matrix Partners China, which led its $5 million Pre-A Series in September 2018. The company is currently finalizing its Series A.
The landscape: China’s cybersecurity industry will reach RMB 63 billion ($8.95 billion) this year, according to figures from the China Academy of Information and Communications Technology.
Prospects: China’s 2017 Cybersecurity Law and an upcoming law governing cryptography have forced companies to improve their security.
Facebook is suing two Chinese nationals and a Hong Kong-based advertising agency for allegedly using the platform to deceive internet users into installing malware, allowing them to compromise “hundreds of thousands” of social media accounts to run ads for counterfeit goods.
Why it matters: The lawsuit is not the first the social media giant has filed this year against a Hong Kong company.
Details: Facebook has filed the lawsuit against ILikeAd Media International Company Ltd., as well as Chinese nationals Chen Xiaocong and Huang Tao for creating and distributing the malware.
“Cloaking schemes are often sophisticated and well organized, making the individuals and organizations behind them difficult to identify and hold accountable. As a result, there have not been many legal actions of this kind.”
—Facebook in a statement
Context: In August, Facebook sued Hong Kong-based app developer LionMobi for “click injection fraud,” allowing the company to profit from fake clicks on ads displayed on a smartphone.
Editor’s note: This article was sponsored by BMW China. We believe in transparency in our publishing and monetization model. Read more here.
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As autonomous driving technology is bringing up reformation of traditional automotive industry, BMW is actively adopting its innovation strategies. Opportunities go together with significant challenges, “The complexity of Chinese road condition is much higher than that of western countries, which requires designated solutions.” Peter Riedl said during an interview at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019, Riedl heads up the Tech Office China under the BMW China R&D umbrella, which is the biggest R&D footprint outside Germany. Besides, he also mentioned other influence factors such as traffic laws applied by different regions, thorough communications and understanding are certainly needed.
BMW R&D Centers in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenyang structured the biggest research network outside of Germany, BMW’s headquarter. These R&D centers support cutting-edge topics like Electric Vehicle, Autonomous Driving, Connected Cars, etc. BMW Group stepped into Autonomous Driving R&D in the year of 2006. Currently, over one hundred tech experts in Beijing and Shanghai are striving together with their counterparts in BMW HQ and other European R&D teams to guarantee 7/24 efforts on this topic.
BMW Group has become the first foreign OEM to be awarded the license by the Shanghai Government to test autonomous driving cars, which could be spotted in Shanghai International Automobile City. And to fasten the development of autonomous driving technology, BMW works closely with Chinese technology companies. In July, 2019, BMW announced its partnership with ChinaUnicom, Tencent and NavInfo (a leading digital map solution provider).
Except for co-operation with tech giants, BMW Group never stopped seeking the rising stars. Starting from 2015, BMW Group set up the BMW Startup Garage program, which is the venture client unit within BMW to provide startups a gateway into the multi-trillion dollar automotive industry. The BMW Startup Garage looks to become the early adopting venture client of top startups that can make a difference to innovation at the BMW Group. There are now more than 60 startups having become the alumnus of this program with their promising projects.
“The borderline between technology startups and automotive enterprises is blurring.” Said Riedl. He mentioned some of the cases he worked on with tech startups to TechNode reporter, for example the experiment of long-distance remote control under 5G networks with AI technologies.
“China market has always been highly-valued by BMW Group as the biggest single market for us and with its leading position now regarding autonomous driving technologies.” Based on a market forecast research conducted by IHS Markit, China would contribute over 14 million sales volume of autonomous driving cars by 2040, which is about 44% of global market share. China is highly possible to become the biggest market for autonomous driving cars.
“BMW Group always has continued and will continue expand China market and adapt its open innovation strategy here as we always did.”
]]>China has renewed its offensive against apps that incorrectly collect data, taking offline around 100 apps in an investigation targeting numerous industries including the banking and e-commerce sectors.
Why it matters: China authorities are cracking down on apps that over-collect personal information as internet companies’ failures to protect users persist and data theft remains a widespread issue.
Details: China’s Ministry of Public Security (MPS) has removed the apps and ordered that issues be “rectified” in cases where apps over-collected data, did not have privacy agreements, or were unclear about the data that they collected.
Context: Data overcollection and information breaches have become a significant issue in China, where the market for illicit information is booming.
China’s internet population at risk as apps collect too much data: CN-CERT
Artificial intelligence (AI) firm Megvii has delayed its Hong Kong listing until next year following additional queries from the stock exchange as it prepares to go public, Nikkei Asian Review reported.
Why it matters: Megvii was one of several Chinese AI companies added to the American so-called Entity List in October for alleged complicity in human rights violations in China.
Details: Megvii had initially timed its initial public offering (IPO) to take place before the end of the year. However, the company decided to push the date to next year after additional scrutiny from the Hong Kong stock exchange, according to separate reports from Nikkei Asian Review and International Financing Review.
Context: Megvii was expected to become the first of China’s AI startups to go public. The company would have acted as a litmus test of sorts, paving the way for other companies in the industry.
Bottom line: Potential investors are hesitant about buying shares in Megvii after the blacklisting. The company may have trouble hitting a $3.5 billion valuation, a source previously told Bloomberg. The company was valued at $4 billion in its latest funding round.
]]>People in China will need to undergo a facial recognition scan when buying new SIM cards, according to rules introduced on Sunday, as the country seeks to tackle telecommunications fraud and improve cybersecurity.
Why it matters: Facial recognition is ubiquitous in China, with applications ranging from payments to public security.
Details: The rule ensures that internet personas are tied to real identities as online platforms typically require users to register their phone numbers when signing up for services requiring real-name verification.
Sensetime-led consortium to set up standards for facial recognition tech
Context: China last month set up a working group for facial recognition standards that aims to assuage concerns over data security issues surrounding the technology.
Alibaba Cloud, a subsidiary of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, has opened to the public its source code for an in-house machine-learning platform that it used to drive product recommendations during this year’s Singles Day shopping festival.
Why it matters: Alibaba has sharpened its focus on open-source software since 2011. The company’s cloud division is a member of the Linux Foundation and is active in a number of open-source communities including the Apache Software Foundation.
Details: Dubbed Alink, the platform offers a range of algorithm libraries that allow for processing live data as well as batched datasets, Alibaba Cloud said in a statement on Thursday.
“The difference between Alink and the pure AI platforms like Tensorflow and PyTorch is that those focus more on the algorithms and the design of the models. But today, for machine learning models to train effectively, we need to have a high-quality connection to the big data. Alink provides us with a seamless connection between the AI algorithms and the big data distributed systems.”
—Jia Yangqing, president and senior fellow of Data Platform at Alibaba Cloud Intelligence to TechNode on Thursday
Context: The State Council, China’s cabinet, has set ambitious goals for the country to become a global leader in AI by 2030. As a result, China has applied AI across industries, permeating every facet of daily life.
A consortium of Chinese technology companies has banded together to establish standards for developing facial recognition technology, as concerns grow with the technology’s increased ubiquity.
Why it matters: Facial recognition has become part of everyday life in China, with applications in sectors as far-ranging as public security to retail.
Details: The working group was established on Nov. 20 and is made up of companies including social media and gaming giant Tencent, Alibaba-affiliate Ant Financial, smartphone maker Xiaomi, voice recognition firm iFlytek, and surveillance equipment manufacturer Dahua Technology, among others.
Context: Despite the convenience that facial recognition technologies bring, the fallout could be disastrous if facial data falls into the wrong hands.
Chinese smartphone maker OnePlus has suffered a data breach involving its customers’ order information, the company said in a statement without disclosing how many users have been affected.
Why it matters: The incident is the second time in two years the smartphone maker has suffered a security breach. In January 2018, OnePlus reported that credit card data for up to 40,000 of its users had been stolen.
“We have discovered that some of our users’ order information was accessed by an unauthorized party. Impacted users may receive spam and phishing emails as a result of this incident.”
—OnePlus in a statement
Details: OnePlus said that information including customer names, contact numbers, and email and shipping addresses may have been accessed by an “unauthorized party.” The company did not disclose how many users were impacted but said that “payment information, passwords, and accounts are safe.”
Context: In 2018, OnePlus reported that it had been attacked and around 40,000 users had their credit card information compromised. The company then temporarily shut down credit card payments on its website.
China is looking to introduce rules that could affect the way cybersecurity researchers in the country disclose vulnerabilities, requiring them to report issues to authorities before making them public, according to draft regulations published this week.
Why it matters: The changes limit media from publishing disclosures before they have been reported to authorities, potentially delaying how quickly the affected individuals and companies are notified.
Details: Vulnerability disclosures cannot contain source code for viruses, trojans, or any form of ransomware, as well as methods of breaking into or disrupting networks, according to internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China.
Dust has yet to settle two years after China’s landmark cybersecurity law
Context: Vulnerability disclosures are an important part of improving cybersecurity, and prompt warnings to individuals and businesses are integral to containing the damage.
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China’s electric vehicle (EV) market has seen a four-month slump in deliveries since purchase subsidies were slashed over the summer. The move has left the industry reeling, while startups battle for funds and investors become increasingly wary.
“The whole industry obviously has seen a significant slowdown after the subsidy cuts,” Brian Gu, Xpeng president and vice-chairman told TechNode at TechCrunch Shenzhen this month.
EV subsidies are expected to decrease by a further 50% next year, and completely disappear in two years. The Chinese government has sought to counter automakers’ reliance on the subsidies to sell their vehicles, hoping the reduction will force these companies to innovate.
Despite mounting troubles in the industry, Xpeng recently closed its $400 million Series C. “We need a war chest to tackle the Chinese consumer market in order to build up our brand,” Gu said. “We have a lot of things planned, and we see this capital as being instrumental in achieving these goals.”
Founded in 2014, Xpeng is one of the few EV makers in China that has begun delivering vehicles. The company launched its first car, the G3 SUV, in 2018, subsequently releasing an enhanced version with a longer driving range. Xpeng also plans to begin deliveries of its P7 sedan in the second quarter of 2020.
Meanwhile, rival Chines companies Nio and Byton have struggled to secure new funds amid a macro-economic slowdown and flagging auto market. Nio has yet to finalize a RMB 10 billion ($1.42 billion) deal with Beijing E-T0wn, a state-backed capital fund, that the company announced in May.
Gu believes that the government’s investment in charging infrastructure and a focus on innovation will help the industry reach an “inflection point,” where EVs become more competitive than gas-driven cars.
“We would like to see the industry become more product-focused, competing on product merit rather than just subsidy levels,” he said.
With contributions from Chris Udemans
]]>Artificial intelligence (AI) firm Megvii plans to seek approval for its Hong Kong listing on Thursday, aiming to raise at least $500 million, Reuters reported citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: In October, the US government added Megvii to the so-called “Entity List” for alleged complicity in Beijing’s human rights abuses in China. The move effectively blocks the company from sourcing American-made components for its products.
Details: Megvii was previously seeking a fourth-quarter listing of up to $1 billion, according to Reuters.
Context: Megvii is one of a handful of startups that is spearheading China’s AI boom, including Sensetime, Yitu, and Cloudwalk, though none have yet gone public.
Biometrics firm Megvii’s contract in Taiwan at risk after US blacklisting
Electric vehicle (EV) maker Nio has appointed a former auto analyst as the company’s new chief financial officer, the automaker announced on Sunday, replacing Louis Hsieh who left unexpectedly in October citing personal reasons.
Why it matters: Hsieh was key in taking Nio public in New York last year, and his resignation led to much speculation about why an important figure would leave the company in the midst of a search for new investment.
“[Feng Wei’s] financial and operational experience in the automotive-related fields, together with an impressive track record in equity research, makes him an excellent choice to lead our finance teams.”
—Nio CEO and founder William Li in a statement
Details: Prior to joining Nio, Feng Wei was an auto analyst at China International Capital Corporation (CICC). His appointment at Nio is effective starting Monday.
Context: Feng’s arrival comes as Nio attempts to keep its head above water as conditions in China’s auto market become increasingly difficult. EV sales continue to slide in the second half of the year after the government did away with subsidies for buyers over the summer.
A US congressional advisory body has warned that China’s focus on developing artificial intelligence (AI) could have marked effects on the global economic and military balance, shifting the seat of power from America to China.
Why it matters: Beijing has set ambitious goals to become a world leader in AI by 2030. Sensetime, the world’s most valuable AI startup, comes from China.
“Chinese firms and research institutes are advancing uses of AI that could undermine US economic leadership and provide an asymmetrical advantage in warfare.”
—US-China Economic and Security Review Commission
Details: China is prioritizing AI as it underpins the development of many other technologies, and could lead to “substantial scientific breakthroughs, economic disruption, enduring economic breakthroughs, and rapid changes in military capabilities,” the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission said in its 2019 report released on Thursday.
Context: In the midst of the protracted US-China trade war, several high-profile Chinese AI companies have found themselves in the crosshairs.
China’s ‘military-civil’ partnerships could hurt its AI ambitions: report
Xpeng Motors has brought onboard smartphone maker Xiaomi as a strategic investor, as the Alibaba-backed new energy vehicle (NEV) startup announced $400 million in Series C funding.
Why it matters: Xpeng’s hefty haul comes against a macro-industrial backdrop of falling sales after subsidies for electric vehicles were cut over the summer, creating an increasingly difficult funding environment for NEV startups.
“The business definitely needs capital to grow. It is a business that is still very much in the ramping up stage and we have to invest in research and development, in building our sales and services network, and completing our manufacturing plant, which we aim to have built by the end of this year. We have been working closely with Xiaomi on smart devices and they have the IoT leadership in China, and even globally, and smart auto could be a very good extension of the ecosystem.”
—Xpeng President Brian Gu, speaking to TechNode at TechCrunch Shenzhen on Tuesday
Details: Xiaomi is among a group of strategic and institutional investors to take part in the funding round. Xpeng also secured several billions of RMB-denominated unsecured credit lines from Chinese and commercial lenders including China Merchants Bank, China CITIC Bank, and HSBC.
Context: China’s total NEV deliveries are expected to remain flat this year compared with 2018, according to a report from China International Capital Corp.
“China’s artificial intelligence (AI) is like a kid with an IQ of 120. The US’ is a child with an IQ of 140. But in the US, the kid hasn’t left the laboratory,” according to Zhou Wei, founder and managing partner of China Creation Ventures.
Zhou said that China’s AI industry could overtake that of the US given the country’s move toward mass implementation of the technology and the fast rates of business model iteration.
“In the long run, the Chinese kid could outpace the US child,” he said during a fireside chat at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2019 on Monday.
Zhou’s comments come in the midst of a protracted US-China trade war, in which several high profile Chinese AI companies have been caught in the crosshairs.
The world’s most valuable AI startup Sensetime, as well as surveillance equipment maker Hikvision and speech recognition firm iFlytek, among others, were placed on a US trade blacklist last month for their alleged complicity in human rights violations in China.
Zhou’s sentiments echo those of Chinese AI expert and founder of Sinovation Ventures, Kai-fu Lee, who claimed previously that China mass-implementation of AI, access to data, and size of China’s internet population could put the country at the forefront of the technology’s development.
“Business models in China are iterated quickly, while Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and investors want to come up with a product that is perfect and doesn’t have too many problems,” Zhou said.
AI applications permeate every aspect of life in China, where it used from everything from facilitating facial recognition payments to keeping tabs on the country’s population and assessing potential risks related to loans.
The country has also become a haven for data production as internet users’ daily lives move online. For example, mobility services including bike-sharing and ride-hailing generate gargantuan amounts of data that can be used for training an AI. China’s biggest ride-hailing platform Didi recently released a transit dataset to help researchers in a push to better understand transport patterns and optimize infrastructure investments.
Nevertheless, China faces the prospect of a major brain drain, according to MacroPolo, a China-focused think tank at the Paulson Institute in Chicago. Around three-quarters of the country’s AI talent is currently located outside of China, the research body found for its analysis of submissions to the NeurIPS conference.
Speed is a requirement for companies in China, said Zhou, adding that whoever is fastest will be the winner. “China’s consumers are tolerant of new projects and also impatient,” he said.
Zhou noted that this fast aspect has also become a problem for venture capital firms, who can struggle to keep up. “We’re really under a lot of pressure to learn quickly and to be very focused,” he added.
]]>Ride-hailing giant Didi has backtracked on plans to impose gender-specific operating hours when relaunching its carpooling service Hitch later this month, following public outcry blasting the company for limiting women’s freedoms.
Why it matters: Didi suspended its Hitch service indefinitely last year following two separate incidents in which drivers on the platform raped and murdered their female passengers.
Details: Didi on Wednesday announced that it would relaunch Hitch on a trial basis later this month, more than a year after suspending the service.
Context: Didi has faced scrutiny in the past for allowing sexist practices to creep into its services.
Search giant Baidu beat analyst expectations for its third quarter revenues as the company’s diversification away from its core search business showed signs of paying off.
Why it matters: Baidu has seen increased competition for advertising revenue from rivals including Bytedance and Tencent in the midst of a macroeconomic slowdown that has led advertisers to tighten their belts.
Details: Baidu’s Q3 revenue reached RMB 28.1 billion (around $4 billion), beating analyst expectations of RMB 27.5 billion. Revenue was up 7% compared with the second quarter.
Context: Baidu has plowed billions into diversifying its offerings, particularly on artificial intelligence and cloud computing, and is looking to enterprise services for growth.
Ride-hailing giant Didi will resume operations of its carpooling service Hitch on a trial basis this month, the company announced on Wednesday. The relaunch comes a year after Didi suspended the service indefinitely over safety concerns.
Why it matters: Didi halted its Hitch service last year after two separate incidents involving female passengers using the platform who were raped and murdered by their drivers.
Details: Operations of the rebooted service will be limited to seven cities, including Beijing, eastern China’s Nantong and Changzhou, and the northern cities of Harbin and Taiyuan, among others.
Context: Didi has removed more than 300,000 unqualified drivers from its platforms following a government crackdown on the industry in the wake of the murders.
Artificial intelligence (AI) startup Megvii is considering whether to delay its Hong Kong listing despite plans to go public before year-end, Bloomberg reported.
Why it matters: Megvii was among several of China’s biggest AI firms added to the US government’s so-called Entity List in October, effectively blocking them from sourcing American-made components.
Undeterred by US blacklisting, AI firm Megvii eyes end-year IPO
Details: Megvii is currently discussing with advisers whether to press ahead with the listing this month or postpone until the company is removed from the Entity List, sources told Bloomberg.
Context: Megvii was expected to become China’s first AI startup to go public, acting as a possible litmus test and paving the way for other companies in the industry to follow.
Artificial intelligence (AI) startup Clobotics is looking to cash in on China’s massive wind energy boom, using its technology to automate turbine inspections that typically take up to six hours when done manually.
The backstory: Founded in 2016, Clobotics provides computer vision and data analytics solutions for the wind power and retail industries. The company aims to automate time-intensive processes through data analysis.
Unique selling point: Clobotics claims to be able to complete inspections of wind turbines in 25 minutes, with the help of autonomous drones and its computer vision platform, a process that typically takes six hours when done manually. This could dramatically reduce labor costs and the amount of time a turbine is out of service during the inspection process.
“We are committed to providing the best AI solutions to digitalize the traditional industries. When smart devices marry computer vision technologies, massive amounts of offline data are collected, recognized, and analyzed automatically through artificial intelligence.”
—Clobotics co-founder George Yan
The investors: Clobotics has attracted investors including GGV Capital, CDIB Capital, the overseas-focused investment arm of Taiwan-based China Development Financial, and CMC Capital. It most recently closed its $22 million Series Pre-B.
Present condition: Clobotics is currently seeking to increase its market share in the US and Europe. The company this year partnered with GEV Wind Power, a company providing wind turbine maintenance services globally, expanding the Chinese startup’s reach to North America, Europe, and Africa.
The landscape: Drones have been used in inspections in the past, but Clobotics’ system includes autonomous drones that automate the process.
Prospects: Clobotics has in the past year seen increasing attention from new and old investors, closing two rounds of funding collectively worth $33 million. As developers rush to install new capacity before China drops subsidies in 2021, Clobotics could see a drastic increase in the adoption of its services.
The company has also not limited itself to the Chinese market, as it seeks to expand to offer its autonomous inspections globally and take advantage of the renewable energy boom that has arisen over escalating concerns over carbon emissions.
]]>China is attempting to predict potential crimes using artificial intelligence (AI), employing the technology to monitor the emotional state of its citizens, the Financial Times reported.
Why it matters: China is the world’s largest surveillance market and is home to some of the world’s biggest equipment makers.
“Using video footage, emotion recognition can rapidly identify criminal suspects by analyzing their mental state… to prevent illegal acts including terrorism and smuggling.”
—Li Xiaoyu, policing expert and party cadre from Xinjiang, cited by FT
Details: Emotion recognition was a hot topic at this year’s China Public Security Expo, the country’s biggest surveillance fair.
Context: China’s surveillance capabilities have expanded rapidly over the past few years, with a focus on domestic stability.
China’s state-backed hackers are targeting telecommunication companies using malware, allowing them to steal text messages and communications metadata en masse, cybersecurity researchers have found.
Why it matters: The hackers are part of a collective dubbed Advanced Persistent Threat 41 (APT41), which is unique among other Chinese groups as it uses tools typically reserved for espionage on operations that fall outside state control.
“The use of Messsagetap and targeting of sensitive text messages and call detail records at scale is representative of the evolving nature of Chinese cyber espionage campaigns. APT41 and multiple other threat groups attributed to Chinese state-sponsored actors have increased their targeting of upstream data entities since 2017.”
—Researchers at FireEye
Details: The attack, dubbed Messagetap, is highly targeted and victims include political leaders, as well as military and intelligence organizations, according to US-based cybersecurity firm FireEye.
Context: APT41 not only conducts espionage operations but also engages in cybercrime for economic gain, which has helped the group hone its skills to support its state-sponsored operations.
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Electric vehicle maker Nio is looking to alleviate range anxiety among prospective car buyers by rolling out higher capacity batteries, supplementing its existing network battery swap stations.
Nio is one of China’s most visible electric vehicle makers and is often seen as the poster child for the sector nationally. The New York-listed company has had a tough year, as macroeconomic factors take their toll on China’s auto market, leading to an overall decline in sales.
TechNode tested Nio’s flagship SUV, the ES8, with the company’s newly released 84kWh battery. The upgrade extends the vehicle’s NEDC range from 355 to 425 kilometers. Nio began delivering the ES8 with the upgraded battery option in October. Previously the vehicle came equipped with a capacity of 70kWh.
The company believes the update can improve the competitiveness of the ES8, a vehicle that falls into the premium bracket, according to Nio founder William Li.
We approached the test from a consumer’s point of view, trying to ascertain how the vehicle would fare on a daily basis. Setting a popular culinary attraction on the outskirts of the eastern Chinese city of Suzhou as our destination, we put the new battery, Nio Pilot, and China’s charging infrastructure through their paces.
Nio Pilot functions, including automatic lane changing and automatic braking, worked well on highways and city streets. The system also includes warnings if you get too close to the lane markers, with haptic feedback in the steering wheel. The vehicle requires the driver to take over when it senses pedestrians in the road ahead. Not specific to Nio Pilot, we did at first find it difficult to trust in ADAS and its limitations.
Meanwhile, the battery performed well. The trip included a lot of highway driving, which typically requires more energy than travelling on urban roads.
There were problems, however. At times, Nio’s in-voice assistant required numerous calls to wake it up. While not an issue with the ES8, we also encountered problems with charging infrastructure in and around Shanghai. A number of public charging piles we attempted to use were broken or had cars parked in bays while not being charged.
With contributions from Jill Shen
]]>China’s share of global artificial intelligence (AI) investment is shrinking amid ongoing trade tensions with the US and efforts to curtail Chinese firms’ access to American components, according to new research.
Why it matters: China hopes to become a world leader in artificial intelligence by 2030, according to a 2017 plan by the State Council, the country’s cabinet.
“If the Chinese AI chipset industry starts to take over, that will be China’s opportunity to reclaim the top spot. Startups like Horizon Robotics, Cambricon Technology, Unisound, and Pony.ai seem to be unicorns in the making.”
—Lian Jye Su, principal analyst at ABI Research, told TechNode
Details: AI investment in the US totaled $9.7 billion in 2018 compared with China’s $7.4 billion, according to ABI Research. In year-on-year comparisons, US investments in AI grew 120% while those in China rose 54%.
Context: In early October, Sensetime, iFlytek, Megvii, and Hikvision, among others, were placed on a US trade blacklist. A number of these firms said they don’t expect the move to have a significant effect on their businesses.
Fintech firm 360 Finance has set up a research institute aimed at developing technologies to improve privacy and digital security in the financial services industry.
Why it matters: The move comes as China doubles down on cryptography regulation, passing a dedicated law in the hopes of enhancing information security in cyberspace.
Details: 360 Finance’s Privacy Protection and Secure Computing Institute will be led by Shen Yun, the company’s chief data scientist.
China passes new cryptography law, laying ground for digital currency rollout
Context: Data leaks remain a widespread issue in China even as the country imposes numerous laws and frameworks to protect consumer information.
iFlytek’s net profit for the third quarter doubled year on year to RMB 184.1 million (around $26.1 million), coming shortly after the company was added to a US trade blacklist earlier this month.
Why it matters: iFlytek was one of several Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) firms included on the so-called US Entity List, effectively blocking the company from doing business with American firms without explicit permission.
Details: While third-quarter profit increased by 108%, the company’s revenues grew by just 13% year on year, iFlytek said in a filing to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.
Context: iFlytek focuses on natural language processing, speech evaluation, and speech recognition. The company says it has more than 70% share of the market in China.
Shanghai-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup Emotibot has closed its $45 million Series B+, aiming to improve the emotion-sensing capabilities of robots in human-machine interaction.
Why it matters: The company lists social media and gaming giant Tencent, video streaming firm iQiyi, and robot maker UBTech as its partners.
Details: Emotibot’s latest round was led by V Fund Management, Linfeng Capital, and an undisclosed strategic investor. Puhua Capital, Keywise Capital, and VC Keywise Capital also participated.
Context: Emotibot focuses on building chatbots that are able to identify emotional responses in humans, which the company believes is the next step in the evolution of artificial intelligence.
Security-focused Chinese web browser Maxthon contains a vulnerability that could give hackers administrative rights on Windows computers, granting them control over an operating system, cybersecurity researchers have found.
Why it matters: Maxthon International, the browser’s developer, claims that 670 million internet users worldwide utilize its software as their default browser. TechNode was unable to verify the claim.
Details: The vulnerability could give malware, and thereby malware authors, administrative rights on Windows computers they have already infected and on which the browser is installed, researchers from US-based cybersecurity firm Safebreach said a report shared with TechNode. Administrative rights allow a user to install, modify, and delete software and files on a computer.
Context: In 2016, Polish researchers found that Maxthon browsers sent details about users’ operating systems, homepages, web and search history, and installed applications back to servers in China, albeit in encrypted form.
The article has been updated to include a response from Maxthon.
]]>China’s biggest search engine Baidu is optimistic about its investments in artificial intelligence (AI) despite the company’s recent financial troubles and increasing competition from domestic competitors.
Why it matters: Baidu has had a rollercoaster of a year, including seeing its share price fall by 36% year to date. The company posted its first quarterly loss in the second quarter since it went public in the US in 2005.
“Artificial intelligence will not destroy human beings but will give people eternal life… Everything every person has said and done, even people’s memories, emotions and consciousness can be digitally stored on network disks or the cloud. Machines can learn people’s way of thinking.”
—Li as cited in the South China Morning Post
Details: Li was speaking at the plenary session of the World Internet Conference in the eastern Chinese city of Wuzhen on Sunday. He believes that AI will bring revolutionary changes to how humans and machines interact and act as a force for good.
Bytedance takes on Baidu with investment in Wikipedia-like Hudong Baike
Context: In 2017, the State Council, China’s cabinet, set out goals aimed at making the country a world leader in AI by 2030. Baidu was later named one of China’s “AI Champions” for its autonomous driving efforts.
Daniel Povey, former Johns Hopkins professor and developer of open-source speech recognition toolkit Kaldi, is currently in talks to join smartphone maker Xiaomi to develop a next-generation voice recognition platform for the company.
Why it matters: Xiaomi has sharpened its focus on its smart home ecosystem, which is typically controlled using the device maker’s smart speakers and voice assistant.
“I am very close to signing an agreement to work for Xiaomi in Beijing. Would leave before end of 2019, and would hire a small team there to work on next-gen `PyTorch-y’ Kaldi.”
—Povey on Twitter
Details: Povey, an important figure in the speech recognition field, was originally hired by Facebook after his dismissal from the university. However, he eventually declined the posting when the social media giant added conditions to his contract due to the circumstances under which he left Johns Hopkins.
Context: Xiaomi adopted a strategy this year dubbed “Smartphone + AIoT,” or artificial intelligence of things, as it expanded its connected device offering, hoping to combat a slowdown in China’s smartphone market.
Artificial intelligence startup Megvii will continue to seek a Hong Kong listing despite being blacklisted by the US earlier this month and is aiming for an early November listing hearing, Bloomberg reported.
Why it matters: Megvii filed for a Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO) in August following reported delays due to ongoing US-China trade tensions.
Details: Megvii is currently seeking a listing hearing in November, people familiar with the matter told Bloomberg.
Biometrics firm Megvii’s contract in Taiwan at risk after US blacklisting
Context: Alibaba-backed Megvii provides its facial recognition technology to companies including smartphone maker Xiaomi and payments firm Ant Financial. The AI firm also supplies solutions for public security bureaus around China.
China is the world’s largest investor in new energy vehicles (NEVs). For the past decade, the government has put its might behind developing electric cars, spending billions on consumer-facing subsidies to lower the upfront costs of these vehicles.
These subsidies made China the largest electric vehicle market in the world, growing 450% in the six years ending in 2015. Pure battery-powered cars seemed to be winning the race. With 75% of all NEV sales in the country between 2009 and 2015, they catapulted ahead of alternatives like plug-in hybrids (vehicles that use both electric and gas power).
This year, however, Beijing changed its tack. The government dramatically scaled back subsidies, forcing automakers to boost innovation and reduce reliance on government incentives.
The move immediately caused an industry-wide speed wobble. In July, the first full month since the cuts were imposed, sales of NEVs fell for the first time in two years. This was followed a month later by a steeper 16% decrease year-on-year.
In July, marking a notable shift towards fuel-efficient technologies, a government vice minister stated that China was setting a new agenda to adopt a more diversified technology approach for NEV development in the future. What has the central government done to bolster the nascent industry and why it is changing its policy?
Drive I/O is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the cutting edge of mobility: EVs, AVs, and the companies trying to build them. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
Hybrid vehicles have never really taken off in China, despite worldwide support. These vehicles accounted for just 10% of the 1.5 million passenger vehicles that Toyota sold in the country last year.
Hybrids typically have not benefited from the government’s preferential electric vehicle subsidies, falling between the cracks of government support and public favor.
This year, the situation quietly began to change. The first major shift came from China’s dual-credit policy, the country’s complex point-based system requiring automakers to produce a certain number of NEVs. The Chinese government defines three types of vehicles as NEVs: pure electric cars, plug-in hybrids, and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles. Traditional hybrids are categorized as conventional internal combustion engine (ICE) powered vehicles.
For example, in one case, an automaker would be required to produce 20,000 electric cars for every 1 million traditional gasoline-powered vehicles in order to be awarded credits as part of China’s emissions-reduction policies.
This policy has now shifted to increase focus on hybrid vehicles, a dramatic move from Beijing’s initial goals. Under a modified version of the policy released by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) in July, the target could be slashed by as much as 70% to less than 6,000 electric vehicles if one million vehicles produced by automakers are all hybrids.
Going even further, hybrids will be reclassified as “low-fuel-consumption passenger vehicles,” granting them more preferential treatment in the future, and differentiating them from both internal combustion engine cars and electric vehicles. Beijing aims to issue the updated regulation by year’s end after soliciting feedback from industry experts and the public.
What is compelling the government to make such a major shift? Well, China initially laid out an ambitious timeline to completely ban national production and sales of ICE vehicles, said Xin Guobin, deputy head of the MIIT, at a trade conference in late 2017. However, sales of NEVs have slowed substantially since last year, hit by the flagging economy as well as public concern over range problems and car safety.
Also, when compared with the volume of 240 million ICE vehicles nationwide last year, the 2.6 million NEVs currently on the road barely register, which makes fuel-efficient development more urgent.
More worryingly, Chinese OEMs took advantage of the policy, producing a low number of electric cars to achieve credits even as they sold gas-guzzlers without scruples. China’s average fuel consumption surpassed 7 liters per 100 kilometers in 2017, according to figures from the Innovation Center for Energy and Transportation (iCET). The think tank warned that if the situation continues unchanged, Beijing may not be able to meet their goal of 5 liters per 100 kilometers by 2020.
China’s subsidy policies go back as far as 2009. The country had been late to produce passenger cars, lagging behind the US, Japan, and Germany. With the development of electric vehicles, the government hoped to change this trend.
During that year, China’s state planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), partnered with three other departments to kick off an ambitious financing plan paving the way for China to become a leader in NEV development and adoption. In 13 municipalities—including Beijing, Shanghai, southwestern Chongqing and northeastern Changchun—the government body laid the groundwork to roll out 1,000 electric vehicles for public services (including buses, taxis, and postal services) over three years.
Over the next several years, consumers benefited from generous government subsidies. A car buyer could save as much as RMB 60,000 (roughly $8,500) when purchasing a pure electric car. In 2015, the savings amounted to nearly a third of the price of a medium-level vehicle with a range of about 240 kilometers.
However, the government knew that they couldn’t support subsidies indefinitely. In late 2015, these grants were scaled back for the first time by 10%. This was followed by a further cut in 2016, which slashed the subsidy for a high-performance electric car by nearly 20% to RMB 44,000. According to a 2016 subsidy-reduction plan released by the Ministry of Finance (MoF), China planned another 40% cut by 2020.
The other shoe finally dropped in March of this year. The MoF announced its intention to completely do away with subsidies for EVs with a range of below 250 kilometers, starting in June. The incentive for high-performance electric cars was also slashed by 50% to just RMB 25,000. What’s more, the central government revealed plans to phase out financial support completely after 2020.
The upshot is that electric cars have become substantially more expensive for either the buyer or the manufacturer, depending on who absorbs the additional cost. For bigger manufacturers, dealing with a post-subsidy world could prove to be easier than for China’s numerous EV startups.
But there was a method to Beijing’s madness. After years of government subsidies, China has become home to scores of electric vehicle makers; as of this May, nearly 500 companies had registered as such. Yet most of them haven’t delivered a single vehicle to consumers, and experts believe the majority of these companies will go under as part of an accelerated process of Darwinian competition.
The situation is precarious even for the handful of startups that have managed to deliver vehicles. Once-promising EV stars, such as Nio and Xpeng Motors, have been beset either by customer complaints or a series of car fires. In fact, there has been widespread fear that the ballooning market may be at a risk of bursting, as manufacturers have become overreliant on the government, which holds them back from developing better vehicles on their own.
Amid flagging sales and waning consumer confidence, the government has realized that more time is needed for automakers to deal with key issues around driving range and battery safety. If China is ever to lead the world’s electric vehicle market, it could be a long and bumpy road.
]]>Huawei’s revenue for the first three quarters grew by 24.4% year on year to RMB 610.8 billion (around $86 billion), the company said on Wednesday, showing little sign of slowing despite US sanctions earlier this year.
Why it matters: Huawei was put on a US trade blacklist in May, effectively blocking it from doing business with US companies.
“To date, Huawei has signed more than 60 commercial contracts for 5G with leading global carriers and shipped more than 400,000 5G Massive MIMO active antenna units (AAUs) to global markets.”
—Huawei in its earnings release
Details: Huawei shipped more than 185 million smartphones during the first three quarters, a 26% increase from the same period a year ago, the company said in a statement on Wednesday.
The US move to blacklist Chinese artificial intelligence and surveillance companies has met with widespread condemnation in China despite the companies’ claims that the prohibition won’t have long-term effects on their operations.
On October 7, the US Commerce Department placed several high-profile Chinese AI firms and government agencies on the Entity List—effectively blocking them from doing business with American companies without prior approval.
The organizations include Sensetime, the world’s most valuable AI startup, and the speech recognition and natural language processing firm iFlytek, as well as surveillance camera makers Hikivision and Dahua Technology.
Also included are Alibaba-backed Megvii, which recently filed to go public in Hong Kong—the first Chinese AI startup to do so—and its counterpart Yitu.
In its statement, the Commerce Department said that the companies have been “implicated in human rights violations and abuses” in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, home to predominantly Muslim ethnic minorities. According to US officials, the blacklisted companies were involved in creating the mass surveillance apparatus used to monitor minorities in the region.
Sensetime, Megvii, Yitu, and Hikvision all issued statements opposing the US decision, saying that they comply with Chinese laws. Megvii claimed its inclusion on the list was the result of a “misunderstanding.”
The US announcement came days before Chinese vice-premier Liu He’s visit to Washington to resume trade talks. The Commerce Department maintains that the ban is unrelated to the negotiations.
The blacklisting of these companies is a direct affront to China’s technological ambitions. The country has plowed billions of yuan into shifting its economy up the industrial value chain through the development of the robotics, electric vehicle, semiconductor, and AI sectors. Given that China’s goal is to overtake the US by becoming an AI frontrunner by 2030, the Commerce Department’s move appears to takes aim at that ambition.
While US human rights and pro-democracy groups applauded the export restrictions, the conversation within China has remained focused on the affected companies. Meanwhile, nationalistic fervor has reached fever pitch, with state media claiming the move is just the latest attempt by the US to undermine China’s rise.
China swiftly hit back at the ban, saying that the human rights claims are “fact-distorting gibberish” that attempt to limit China’s counterterrorism efforts.
“Xinjiang does not have the so-called human rights issue claimed by the US. The accusations by the US side are merely made-up pretexts for its interference,” said Geng Shuang, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, state-backed Xinhua News Agency said the ban was aimed at “hindering China’s development,” rather than any real concerns over human rights.
The Global Times, a Communist Party mouthpiece, referred to the ban itself—as well as subsequent visa restrictions on Chinese officials believed to be involved in human rights violations in Xinjiang—as “shameful,” adding that the sanctions will have “little effect.”
Much of this rhetoric was mimicked on Chinese social media, where the majority of netizens put their support behind the homegrown companies.
“America is worried about the rise of great Chinese companies,” one user said, commenting on a statement published by Sensetime on the popular messaging app WeChat.
“Without the US Entity List, many people wouldn’t know that Chinese innovation is leading the way,” said another.
On Weibo, users attributed the ban to the perceived fear of China in the US.
“When the US wildly starts boycotting China, it shows China is powerful enough to scare them,” commented one user from eastern China’s Shandong province.
Meanwhile, the Washington-based NGO Freedom House saw the move as a long-awaited offensive against alleged human rights violations in Xinjiang.
The organization said in a statement on Wednesday that it “applauds” the decision, urging the US government to expand the export restrictions to encompass more companies involved in surveilling dissidents in China.
The Republican senator Ted Cruz, who—as part of a bipartisan coalition of US senators—has pushed for sanctions against entities suspected of involvement in human rights violations in Xinjiang, called the move an “excellent step forward.”
Despite the polarizing effect of the ban, the prohibition did not come as a surprise. Megvii, which provides its facial recognition technology to smartphone maker Xiaomi and payments firm Ant Financial, had alluded to the risks of a potential blacklisting when filing for its Hong Kong IPO.
“If we were subject to economic and trade restrictions, we could be prevented from procuring certain goods and technologies, and our ability to develop and provide our solutions might be impaired.” the company said in its prospectus.
Megvii cited Huawei as an example. Earlier this year, the Chinese telecommunications giant was added to the Entity List over alleged national security concerns related to the company’s technology.
Other companies, including iFlytek and Hikvision, began making contingency plans as far back as last year.
Hikvision said it had begun seeking alternative suppliers to limit its reliance on the US in late 2018, the same year that Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE was banned from sourcing American components for violating US sanctions against Iran and North Korea. ZTE has subsequently been taken off the blacklist.
In an internal memo to employees on Wednesday, iFlytek CEO Liu Qingfeng said the company had already made plans to deal with the situation, adding that he still expected positive financial results for the remainder of the year.
The overall impact on companies such as Sensetime, Megvii, and Yitu is likely to be limited. Megvii’s overseas business accounted for less than 5% of its total revenue during the first half of 2019. Sensetime and Yitu’s financial records are not currently available, as the companies have not submitted listing documents.
Nonetheless, being added to the blacklist could have severe reputational impacts. Chinese AI firms have established partnerships with universities around the world, which these academic institutions are now rethinking.
In June, prior to the export ban, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) reportedly began reassessing its partnership with iFlytek as a result of the speech recognition firm’s technology being used in Xinjiang. The review came after Rutgers University severed its relationship with the company.
Just last week, MIT began reassessing its partnership with Sensetime after the firm was added to the blacklist. Sensetime has similar partnerships with research institutions as well as research centers and offices in Japan, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates.
The effect on companies like Hikvision, which has become the largest supplier of surveillance equipment in the world, could be more pronounced. Around 30% of the company’s operating income currently comes from its overseas sales, according to figures for the first half of the year.
In addition, the company’s components are sourced from a vast array of US manufacturers, including Intel, Seagate, Nvidia, and Western Digital, according to John Honovich, the founder of IPVM, a video surveillance research company. But the company also has a number of non-US suppliers.
Nevertheless, Hikvision executives claim that the company’s reliance on US technology is “relatively low,” instead opting to use semiconductors from companies including Huawei’s chipmaking subsidiary HiSilicon, among others.
]]>A popular Communist Party propaganda app could give Chinese government officials “superuser” access to any Android device on which the program has been downloaded, essentially providing access to all user files, new research has found.
Why it matters: The app, Xuexi Qiangguo, which roughly translates to “Study the Powerful Nation,” has garnered a massive following since it was released earlier this year.
“[The app] boasts technical capabilities that go well beyond what it purports to do, and maintains a level of access that no app would normally have over a user’s device.”
Details: Xuexi Qiangguo gives the government access to all of a smartphone user’s files and provides the ability to run commands on the device, including modifying files and installing software to log keystrokes, the researchers said.
Context: The app was first released in January and rose to the top of Apple’s China App Store shortly after.
Speech recognition firm iFlytek’s operations and development will not be significantly affected by the company being included on a US trade blacklist, according to its chief executive officer.
Why it matters: iFlytek along with several other Chinese technology companies and government agencies were on Monday added to the so-called US Entity List, effectively banning them from doing business with American firms.
Details: iFlytek chairperson and CEO Liu Qingfeng wrote in an internal memo on Wednesday that the company would appeal its inclusion to the Entity List, adding that the iFlytek would see healthy growth throughout the rest of the year.
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is rethinking its relationship with Chinese artificial intelligence firm Sensetime after the US government put the company and several of its counterparts on a trade blacklist over human right violations, Bloomberg reported.
Why it matters: Sensetime, the most valuable AI company in the world, was put on the US Entity List, effectively banning it from doing business with American firms.
“MIT has long had a robust export controls function that pays careful attention to export control regulations and compliance. MIT will review all existing relationships with organizations added to the US Department of Commerce’s Entity List, and modify any interactions, as necessary.”
—MIT in an email to Bloomberg
Details: Sensetime said shortly after being blacklisted that it was “deeply disappointed” with the decision and that it complies with regulations in the countries in which it operates.
Bottom line: Sensetime has been pushing to create a globalized business, opening offices or research centers in countries including Japan, Singapore, and the United Arab Emirates. A trade ban could severely tarnish the company’s reputation, and limit its ability to forge partnerships and recruit new talent.
]]>Chinese hackers have launched a broad campaign against international minority groups, nongovernmental organizations, and governments, distributing weaponized documents through email, cybersecurity researchers say.
Why it matters: The group, dubbed Mustang Panda, is an advanced persistent threat (APT) group, typically state-backed hackers involved in long-term clandestine espionage campaigns.
“The lure documents are themed to be relevant to their targets, and in some cases are copies of legitimate documents that are publicly available… The use of United Nations’ documents regarding activities in the Middle East may also be indicative of think-tank targeting.”
—Researchers at cybersecurity firm Anomali
Details: Anomali identified around 15 different documents created or used by Mustang Panda, which range from malicious files claiming to come from the Vietnam government to others that impersonate documents from religious organizations.
Context: Mustang Panda’s broad range of targets is noteworthy since China’s APT groups are usually specific in their focus. For example, APT19 focuses on espionage in the legal and investment sectors, while APT40 typically targets Belt and Road nations.
Baidu will sell $1 billion of its stake in popular Chinese online travel agent Ctrip as competition for advertising revenue intensifies amid an economic downturn.
Why it matters: Baidu is turning its focus to artificial intelligence, autonomous driving, and cloud services as part of a general trend to offer more enterprise-facing services.
Details: Nasdaq-listed Ctrip will sell 31.3 million shares that are currently owned by Baidu, the company said in a filing. The shares make up around 30% of Baidu’s holdings in Ctrip.
Context: Baidu has had a tough year resulting from the macroeconomic effects of the US-China trade war and increased government scrutiny of online content platforms.
Electric vehicle maker Nio sought to assuage investor concerns after reporting disappointing second-quarter (Q2) results and canceling an earnings call with investors and analysts.
Why it matters: The company rescheduled the call a day after canceling it. Executives took a cautious tone and focused on Nio’s cost-cutting measures and plans to increase its footprint in the world’s largest EV market during the postponed call on Wednesday.
“We are implementing comprehensive cost control measures across the organization. These measures primarily focus on increasing efficiencies and streamlining operations within our sales and service network and our research and development (R&D) functions, as well as reducing our headcount.”
—Louis Hsieh, Nio chief financial officer, during the company’s earnings call on Wednesday
Details: Nio plans open sales offices dubbed Nio Spaces. These showrooms will be smaller and “less capital intensive” than the company’s flagship Nio Houses—essentially showrooms coupled with high-end clubhouses for Nio owners.
Context: Nio’s shares have fallen around 25% this week, wiping $650 million from the company’s market capitalization.
It all started with an IPO. An initial public offering is usually a cause for celebration, but the biggest landmark in the history of Nio ended in dismay.
The company had initially hoped to raise $1.8 billion after landing on the New York Stock Exchange in September of last year. Instead, Nio ended up with just over half of that amount. The EV maker had also sought a valuation of $20 billion, according to Reuters. Nio eventually settled for $3.35 billion after listing.
It was too early to go public, observers had told TechNode. But the automotive business requires heaps of money, and Nio had been burning through its reserves. Its research and development, offices in Europe and the US, and manufacturing partnerships did not come cheap. Not to mention the payroll for their pre-IPO workforce—7,000 employees and counting.
The IPO was disappointing, but Nio quickly moved on. Only a couple of months later, in December 2018, the company had cause to celebrate as it launched the ES6, its second mass-produced SUV. Moreover, sales were improving. Between the third and fourth quarters of the year, Nio was able to more than double its deliveries to almost 8,000 vehicles. Things were looking up.
Drive I/O is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the cutting edge of mobility: EVs, AVs, and the companies trying to build them. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
Unbeknownst to Nio, as the year came to an end, a perfect storm was brewing. A combination of factors including bad planning, regulatory hurdles, and macroeconomic issues began to align, all of which would have a significant effect on the company, eventually leading to an exodus among shareholders.
In 2017, Nio began to move ahead with plans to build a production plant in Shanghai. Despite being one of China’s most promising new automakers, the company did not manufacture its own cars. Instead, it partnered with state-owned carmaker JAC to manufacture its flagship ES8, and later contracted the company to build the ES6.
Investors saw Nio’s outsourcing of production as temporary. After all, the company’s IPO prospectus had promised that a production plant would be built by the end of 2020. The factory would better enable the company to control costs, and also take the reins with manufacturing to ensure quality control.
Then, without warning, Nio hit the brakes. In March of this year, the company announced that it had abandoned its plans to build a plant, opting instead for a “joint manufacturing model” with its current partner JAC. The company said at the time that the move came in response to the Chinese government encouraging these sorts of partnerships and that it believed this model would allow for greater flexibility.
Behind the scenes, however, Nio had been hamstrung by a government-sanctioned program to minimize overcapacity in China’s bloated automotive sector. Since the US-based electric carmaker Tesla had already broken ground on a production facility in Shanghai, Nio would have to wait until that factory had reached capacity before beginning to build its own plant.
In the US, lawsuits against the EV maker began piling up. Investors claimed that they had been misled on a number of fronts: Nio had promised far more sales than the company was actually able to achieve; the anticipated plant would never materialize. The company’s stock price entered a downward spiral.
Meanwhile, the Chinese government was hatching plans to reduce consumer-facing subsidies on electric vehicles. Officials claimed that EV companies were relying too much on government support to sell their vehicles, while not working hard enough to improve their technology.
In fact, the anticipated subsidy cuts were the reason that ES8 sales had peaked in December 2018. Consumers had wanted to get their hands on a vehicle before they became more expensive. When the subsidy cuts were finally implemented in June of this year, they did make EVs significantly less attractive to potential Nio buyers.
Shortly afterwards, sales began to plummet. The company delivered nearly 1,400 vehicles in March, around 1,100 in April, and 1,090 in May. The company attributed the slowdown to macroeconomic factors and the resulting slowdown in China’s auto market. The prolonged trade war with the US was beginning to take its toll. China’s middle class, Nio’s customer base, didn’t have the same buying power it’d had when the company set its sales targets.
Then, in June, just when the company thought things couldn’t get worse, the company was forced to issue a massive recall of nearly 5,000 vehicle batteries, which affected around a quarter of all vehicles sold. The recall followed a crackdown on EV makers after a spate of car fires in China. The news came a week after the company began deliveries of its second SUV, the ES6.
Nio’s recall had a massive impact on the company’s ability to fulfill orders. In July, deliveries slumped to 800 vehicles. Around this time, Nio also began losing executives, both inside China and abroad. Angelika Sodian, managing director of Nio UK, and Zhuang Li, head of Nio’s software team, both announced their resignations at the end of June. In mid-August, a Nio co-founder and executive executive vice president left the company, creating more uncertainty for the embattled company.
As sales flagged, Nio began to tighten its belt. Rumors of layoffs began to abound, and the bad news was later confirmed in Nio’s Q2 earnings. The company began investigating other ways to cut costs. Its costly Formula E team was sold off to the Shanghai-based racing company Lisheng. This sale was a big deal: Nio had made its name by winning the FIA Formula E championship in 2015, one year after the company was founded.
The company is also reported to be spinning off its autonomous driving unit and combining it with Didi Chuxing’s, which is already independent. Because fully autonomous vehicles are years—if not decades—away from becoming a reality, these AV divisions are often costly, putting a strain on any EV company’s books for the foreseeable future.
Nio’s latest blow came in late September when the company reported its Q2 results. The company reported losses in excess of RMB 3 billion. In the week following its earnings release, the company’s share price dropped below $2 for the first time in its history.
For Nio, scaling back its workforce and cutting costs will only buy it time. The company needs to drastically increase its sales numbers, analysts tell TechNode. Despite receiving a RMB 1 billion bailout by a Beijing-based state-backed investment firm and announcing plans to build a production plant in Beijing, Nio’s future remains uncertain.
Some observers say that if Nio and other struggling EV makers don’t manage to sell more cars, they risk becoming the in-house design division for larger automakers through acquisition.
Manufacturers need to sell at least 100,000 vehicles a year to reach profitability, and Nio is no exception. The EV company needs to triple its monthly sales at a minimum, observers say.
]]>E-commerce giant Alibaba has released a self-developed artificial intelligence (AI) chip, as the company increases its focus on chipmaking and aims to improve efficiency on its shopping platforms.
Why it matters: The chip, a neural processing unit, is developed by Alibaba’s chipmaking subsidiary T-Head, known as Pingtouge in Chinese. The company was set up in September last year.
“The launch of Hanguang 800 is an important step in our pursuit of next-generation technologies, boosting computing capabilities that will drive both our current and emerging businesses while improving energy efficiency.
—Jeff Zhang, Alibaba Group chief technology officer
China’s ‘military-civil’ partnerships could hurt its AI ambitions: report
Details: While Alibaba is currently using the Hanguang within its own operations, the company plans to make the chip’s computing power available through its cloud services.
Context: T-Head was formed under Alibaba’s research and development unit DAMO Academy in late 2018. The company earlier this year released an internet of things processor based on RISC-V, the open-source instruction set architecture.
Member states of the “Five Eyes” international intelligence alliance have signed a joint agreement on “responsible” use of cyberspace, with the group looking to target issues including intellectual property (IP) theft coming from China.
Why it matters: China is home to a number of high-profile advanced persistent threat (APT) groups, typically state-backed organizations that conduct clandestine cyber-espionage campaigns to gather intelligence and target the private sector.
“State and non-state actors are using cyberspace increasingly as a platform for irresponsible behavior from which to target critical infrastructure and our citizens, undermine democracies and international institutions and organizations, and undercut fair competition in our global economy by stealing ideas when they cannot create them.”
—Signatories of the agreement
Details: Though the document does not explicitly mention China, the complaints it details have long been seen as pain points when dealing with the world’s second-largest economy.
Context: China’s state-backed hackers have recently been accused of stealing overseas cancer research and patient data as mortality rates from the affliction increase and Chinese companies look to the lucrative oncology industry.
Telecommunications giant Huawei has been suspended from a prominent global cybersecurity trade group amid ongoing US scrutiny of the Chinese company.
Why it matters: While largely unknown, the Forum of Incident Response and Security Teams (FIRST) has become a first responder in major breaches and cybersecurity incidents around the world.
Details: FIRST said that the organization resorted to suspending Huawei’s membership to comply with evolving US export regulations after Huawei was blacklisted, which blocked the tech giant from sourcing American components.
“When regulation directly affects the ability to cooperate, the stability and security of the internet can be placed at risk.”
—FIRST in a statement
Context: Washington has made repeated calls to limit Huawei’s operations in the US, citing national security concerns.
Several popular Chinese wifi routers and networked storage devices contain significant vulnerabilities, that, if exploited, could cause “severe damage,” security researchers have found.
Why it matters: Internet penetration in China has risen dramatically over the past few years, creating a black market for illegally obtained personal data.
“The growth of security awareness through programs such as bug bounties may result in vulnerabilities being patched, but their existence in the first place is troubling. Common devices that are deployed in small office and home office environments are likely vulnerable to exploits that can result in severe damage.”
–Independent Security Evaluators (ISE) in its report
Details: ISE researchers found that devices from Xiaomi, Lenovo, Terramaster, and Totolink manufacturer Zioncom could allow attackers to gain access to private networks.
Context: IoT device manufacturers have long been criticized for not implementing adequate measures to effectively protect their users.
The tale of Nio has not happened in isolation: It is an allegory for China’s electric vehicle market as a whole, in which young EV companies are struggling to survive in an ever-slowing market.
Struggle wasn’t always the norm. In 2015, China’s new energy vehicle market became the world’s largest with annual sales of 370,000 cars. The State Council, China’s cabinet, had earmarked the sector for development as part of a five-year plan, with an aim to drive growth by a system of government-mandated production quotas, central government incentives, and regional purchase subsidies.
As a result, the sector boomed, with as many as 500 EV startups established with backing from government investments, real-estate barons, and tech giants. Everyone wanted to ride the wave of investment in electric cars.
Nio was an early beneficiary of this system. The company is the first of its Chinese counterparts to go public and has received the stamp of approval from Tesla’s second-largest shareholder, Baillie Gifford & Co., which now also owns 11% of Nio. Many have dubbed the company China’s “Tesla killer.” After all, both EV makers are looking to capture the high-end market. But the story, as we shall see, is more complex than it seems.
Nio has seen its share of controversy since listing in September last year. Analysts and experts are now concerned about the company’s future after three years of huge losses, poor sales, and massive recalls.
Drive I/O is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the cutting edge of mobility: EVs, AVs, and the companies trying to build them. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
Nio was created under watchful eyes. The founding shareholders include heavyweight “all-stars” such as gaming and social media giant Tencent, the founder of e-commerce titan JD.com, and Hillhouse Capital.
But to understand the company and what will become of it, one needs to know its founder, William Li, a veteran of China’s auto industry. He, along with an old friend Li Xiang (no relation)—who later went on to found his own EV business, Chehejia—also invested significant amounts in Nio.
In the early 2000s, the two entrepreneurs had started China’s two biggest online auto service platforms, Bitauto and Autohome. William Li’s Bitauto went public on the New York Stock Exchange in 2010, followed by Li Xiang’s Autohome three years later.
William Li was even credited as being “the godfather of Chinese mobility,” investing $400 million in capital in more than 30 auto-related internet companies, including the online used-car platform Uxin, the ride-hailing provider Dida, and the bike-rental platform Mobike.
Investors saw little reason to doubt Li’s experience, eloquence, and charisma—the main drivers of Nio early success. Still, it was the company’s business model that won over potential shareholders.
Originally known as NextEV, the company rebranded itself as Nio—meaning “a new day”—hoping to embody the car company of the future. With grand plans to overhaul the traditional auto industry, the company did not see itself as a manufacturer and seller of cars, but instead aimed for a user-centrism that redefines what it means to own a vehicle. As the company wrote in its first open letter in late 2015, Nio’s mission was to create a lifestyle around its products and a new experience with premium smart electric vehicles and services in the era of mobile internet.
From the very start, Nio targeted Tesla. It was determined to overthrow the American EV giant in China by offering high-performance products at prices lower than that of Tesla.
As part of an ambitious plan to revolutionize the traditional auto sales model, Nio claims to provide a premium customer experience by offering one-stop worry-free service. Each car owner is assigned to an exclusive after-sale service team, which consists of several “fellows” who handle issues related to insurance and repair. Users can even receive personal charging services for an extra charge. The company is banking on this customer service model working in China, despite its lack of success elsewhere.
Moreover, the company has spared no effort to build a large and active network of clubhouses. Its mobile application includes social features, which, the company claims, allows executives including William Li to interact with customers.
All this happened as China became the world’s biggest EV market in 2015—surpassing the US—with hundreds of EV startups springing up overnight, including embattled billionaire Jia Yueting’s EV brand LeSEE and Alibaba-backed Xpeng Motors. Nonetheless, Nio was the most-watched of the lot. Their team boasted hundreds of top engineers across the globe, including Padmasree Warrior, former chief technology officer at Cisco and Motorola, who joined Nio as US chief later that year.
Using her influence in the tech world, Warrior helped Nio enter Silicon Valley. But the company’s worldwide fame truly exploded after it released its EP9 supercar in late 2016. The vehicle broke the record for the fastest all-electric car at the Nürburgring Nordschleife “Green Hell” track in Germany that year—and again at France’s Circuit Paul Ricard.
Nio had moved into the fast lane. In April 2017, it showed off its first mass-market offering, the seven-seat SUV model ES8. A total of 10,000 pre-orders were booked in five months, the company said. This was followed by a $1 billion Series D funding led by Tencent, which valued the company at more than $20 billion.
The strong start led many to believe that Nio, with its notable founders, strong backers, and record-breaking fundraising, was the most likely to succeed among the hundreds of Tesla challengers in China. The company was also turning heads with its high-profile business strategy, radical market expansion, and ambitious goal to disrupt the traditional car-selling business by using leading technologies. Nio looked to be on a perfectly paved road to success.
In November 2017, Nio raised eyebrows when it began spending an astonishing RMB 80 million in annual rent for a 3,000-square meter showroom in a prestigious Beijing mall. The company now boasts over 30 “Nio Houses” nationwide. These stores not only allow potential customers to check out vehicles and take test drives, but also provide Nio car owners an exclusive clubhouse—including a cafe, library, and play area for children—as part of a broader strategy to shape “a joyful lifestyle beyond the car.”
Amid growing concerns whether such unconventional and lavish business strategies could drive sales, Nio drew unprecedented attention in August 2018 when the company filed for a listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
A month later, Nio made history by becoming the first Chinese EV maker to list in New York. However, analysts noticed the huge loss of RMB 11 billion in three years that had resulted from delivering fewer than 500 vehicles. Public opinion of the upstart EV maker began to shift.
China has become one of the main exporters of artificial intelligence-driven surveillance technologies around the world, pushing adoption through its controversial Belt and Road Initiative, according to new research.
Why it matters: China spends more on domestic stability than it does on its military, and artificial intelligence (AI) has become a central pillar of this push.
“China is a major supplier of AI surveillance. Technology linked to Chinese companies are found in at least 63 countries worldwide… There is also considerable overlap between China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) and AI surveillance—36 out of 86 BRI countries also contain significant AI surveillance technology.”
–Steven Feldstein at the Carnegie Endowment for Global Peace (CEGP)
Details: China is home to three out of seven of the world’s biggest companies that provide AI surveillance technology, according to CEGB.
Context: Some of the world’s biggest AI startups are based in China, and they are now looking to capital markets outside of the mainland to raise money for continued expansion.
Australia’s cyber intelligence agency has found that China was behind a cyberattack on the country’s parliament and three largest political parties prior to the general election this year, Reuters reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: In February, Australia revealed that hackers had broken into the network of its national parliament, saying it believed the breach was the work of a foreign government.
Details: Intelligence agency the Australian Signals Directorate (ASD) concluded in March that China’s Ministry of State Security was behind the attack, sources told Reuters.
Chinese state-backed hackers are turning to cybercrime for profit
Context: The attack earlier this year had lawmakers worried, and members of parliament were urged to take precautionary measures including changing their passwords.
China’s internet regulator has instructed online platform operators ensure that their content recommendation algorithms create a “healthy” and “positive” online environment, according to draft rules released on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The Chinese government has taken an increasingly heavy hand when dealing with online content. Beijing has accelerated efforts to rid the internet of “inappropriate content.” Few of the country’s tech companies have managed to avoid censure during the campaign.
“Online platforms should strengthen management of information recommendation or presentation by methods including manual editing or machine algorithms to create a positive and healthy ecosystem.”
–Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC)
Details: The CAC’s draft regulations cover a wide range of online platforms from websites to apps and online forums. The document is open for public comment until October 10.
Context: Operators of services ranging from dating apps to short video platforms have all been censured for hosting “vulgar” content. Companies including Tencent, Weibo, Baidu, and Bytedance have all been affected by an extended operation to clean up China’s cyberspace.
The Trump administration’s chief technology officer warned on Tuesday that while the US currently leads in artificial intelligence (AI) development, China is quickly narrowing the technology gap.
Why it matters: China’s government has taken a top-down approach to improving the country’s technological capabilities, with emphasis on AI advancements.
“Although America is the leader in AI, China is working to catch up… Today, our goal is very clear: The uniquely American ecosystem must do everything its collective power can to keep America’s lead in the AI race and build on our successes.”
—US Chief Technology Officer Michael Kratsios
Details: Kratsios added that the competition between the two nations too often focuses on the disparity in government spending on research and development, referring to China’s funding budgets as being “aspirational” and “cryptic.”
Context: In February US President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing government agencies to increase their focus on AI. However, observers criticized the order, saying it lacked clarity and funding goals.
Search giant Baidu will invest RMB 1.4 billion (around $200 million) in technology investment firm Neusoft Holdings, as the pair look to develop smart city, healthcare, and education solutions.
Why it matters: Baidu is one of the biggest artificial intelligence (AI) companies in China and could see a partnership with Neusoft as a means to better scale its products.
Details: The deal will make Baidu chief technology officer Wang Haifeng a board director at Neusoft.
Context: Baidu’s year got off to a difficult start after reporting a quarterly loss for the first time since listing in 2005.
Chinese automaker Geely has taken a €50 million (around $55 million) stake in German flying taxi startup Volocopter, leading the Series C round in a move which increases its presence in Europe while diversifying its mobility portfolio.
Why it matters: Geely, the holding company based in eastern China’s Zhejiang Province, already owns Swedish manufacturer Volvo and British sports carmaker Lotus. The Chinese company bought a $9 billion stake in Mercedes Benz-owner Daimler last year.
Details: Volocopter aims to use the funding to commercialize its VoloCity air taxi within three years.
“Urban mobility needs to evolve in the next few years to meet rising demand … This funding round is allowing us to take great strides towards bringing Urban Air Mobility to life whilst being respectful of our shareholder’s money.”
—Florian Reuter, CEO of Volocopter, in a statement
Context: Ehang, a Chinese startup looking to commercialize flying taxis, hopes to be the first to launch its vehicles in China.
Chinese state-backed hackers reverse engineered tools used by a US-government affiliated hacking group, enabling them to expand their arsenal of espionage tactics without the need for a direct attack on US intelligence agencies, new research suggests.
Why it matters: Developing new tools for intrusion and espionage requires significant resources. The ability to mimic these tools instead allows hacking groups to develop their arsenal in a relatively short period of time.
Details: APT3, also known as the UPS Team, were able to engineer their own version of a network infiltration tool used by the Equation Group, a hacking collective linked to the National Security Agency (NSA), an American national intelligence unit.
“We believe that this artifact was collected during an attack conducted by the Equation Group against a network monitored by APT3, allowing it to enhance its exploit arsenal with a fraction of the resources required to build the original tool.”
—Mark Lechtik and Nadav Grossman, researchers at cybersecurity firm Check Point
Context: APT3 is one of many Advanced Persistent Threat groups that are active in China. Others include APT41, APT40, and APT30.
Mention autonomous driving in China and the first name that comes up will typically be Baidu. After all, it was the first Chinese tech company to put serious money into researching and developing autonomous driving technologies.
In late 2017, Baidu announced a RMB 10 billion ($1.5 billion) Apollo Fund to invest in 100 self-driving projects over the course of the next three years. The fund was the largest of its kind in the global industry.
Baidu also boasts a massive ecosystem of varied partnerships with more than 150 OEMs, Tier 1 suppliers, chip makers, and mobility firms. Meanwhile, just like its counterparts in the US, the Chinese search giant remains a highly-rated prospect as it vows to launch the country’s first robotaxi service by the end of this year.
But Baidu has fallen short. The company has been criticized for its slow progress in China, stumbling partnerships, and unfulfilled production plans. All of this culminated in rumors earlier this year that the company will spin off its self-driving unit after reporting its worst financial results in almost 15 years.
Drive I/O is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the cutting edge of mobility: EVs, AVs, and the companies trying to build them. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
What has Baidu actually achieved in its self-driving campaign? Does it really deserve the title of China’s AV leader? If the spin-off occurs, what kind of impact will it have on the company itself as well as the industry?
Baidu began working on autonomous driving in 2013. Two years later, the company established its autonomous driving unit.
The company suffered a prolonged brain drain over the next 24 months, including the departure of Andrew Ng, an experienced AI expert and Stanford University professor. It was not until early 2017 that the company established its Intelligent Driving Group (IDG).
The company suffered a prolonged brain drain over the next 24 months. Baidu’s then deputy director Yu Kai quit in mid-2015, leaving to establish AI startup Horizon Robotics. In late 2016, James Peng and Lou Tiancheng, two of Baidu US scientists resigned and together formed AV firm Pony.ai in Silicon Valley. Tong Xianqiao, Heng Liang, and Zhou Guang followed suit one years later to found Roadstar.ai.
Baidu’s talent drain culminated in early 2017 when senior vice president Wang Jin left. He had helped Baidu form the AV unit from scratch. Finally, in March 2017 AI expert and Stanford University professor Andrew Ng resigned as chief scientist to form AV startup Drive.ai.
It was not until early 2017 that the company established its Intelligent Driving Group (IDG), led by Lu Qi, then president and chief operating officer of Baidu. The executive’s role in the newly minted group highlighted its strategically important position and core competency for the company.
The company seemed to be moving at light speed, kicking off Project Apollo in April 2017. Taking its name from the NASA’s missions to the moon, the initiative aimed to build a full-stack software and hardware platform for autonomous vehicles.
Three months later, Baidu made the decision to open-source Apollo—just as Google had done with its Android smartphone operating system—as it set its sights on catching up with its international counterparts.
Since then, Baidu has continued to release major updates every few months, building all aspects of driverless capabilities such as sensing, localization, perception, planning, and control—with tools including cloud services and open-source code.
When it released Version 3.5 earlier this year, Baidu maintained that the platform could handle the challenges of urban roads, including narrow lanes, speed bumps, and crossroads.
The company further ramped up its efforts to support mass production of driverless cars with the release of Apollo 5.0 in July, as well as an updated Apollo Enterprise, a suite of tailor-made autonomous driving solutions for OEMs that focused on robotaxis, minibuses, and valet parking.
In mid-2018, along with Chinese auto manufacturer King Long, Baidu began mass production of a driverless minibus called Apolong. The company also intends to launch a fleet of 100 robocabs in Changsha by the end of this year.
Nonetheless, these production plans have been far from successful. Baidu claims to have transported 40,000 passengers on its 100 Apolongs scattered around 20 Chinese cities. However, the minibus runs 10 km/h, completing an 800-meter journey in around 10 minutes. The vehicles are mostly used on public parks and high-tech campuses.
Baidu has also been late to running a robotaxi service. For the past nine months, the Chinese AV startup Pony.ai has been testing a fleet of dozens of cars, offering over 12,000 rides in a suburban area of 800 square kilometers in the southern city of Guangzhou.
Just as most global self-driving pioneers are backing off their commercialization plans, so too is Baidu. The company has increased its focus on more realistic goals: the connected vehicle market.
DuerOS, Baidu’s proprietary voice assistant, is among the platforms giving the company a competitive edge in the battle for Chinese drivers’ attention. Given the congested nature of China’s urban roads, onboard network services are gaining popularity. In June, Baidu announced it had partnered with more than 60 OEMs to install DuerOS for Apollo (the company’s voice-enabled vehicle connectivity platform) in around 300 car models, including Ford’s Edge ST SUV and Great Wall Motors’ top-selling Haval H6.
Chinese market research firm Gasgoo estimates that Baidu has overtaken former market leader Alibaba to become the leader in China’s vehicle operating system market. The search giant’s vehicle OS will be installed in more than 1 million cars by next year, according to Gasgoo, almost double the market share of Alibaba, which has been in a rocky tie-up with SAIC since 2018.
Baidu’s business with automakers does not look much better. The company had previously planned to work with state-owned BAIC and JAC Motors to produce Level 3 autonomous vehicles this year. However, sales of its Tesla-style enhanced driver assistance system Apollo Pilot were reportedly underwhelming, and the company has since shifted its focus to automated valet parking. Baidu denied the claims, but didn’t reveal further details.
Despite the company’s claims of cooperating with an extensive network of nearly 160 OEMs and key suppliers, a substantial number of them work nominally with Baidu. Instead of adopting Baidu’s in-car OS, automakers are instead opting to build their own software based on Android or Linux.
Automakers are willing to use some of the features the search engine giant provides, such as speech recognition and even its ad service, but are reticent about sharing data with the search giant. These companies see tech giants, including Baidu and Alibaba, as a threat and aim to make their core businesses untouchable, according to Wang Yao, a director at China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM).
Baidu’s Apollo project can lay claim to having done some pioneering work to push the industry. The company has gathered over 400,000 lines of code and 12,000 Github contributors; what’s more, it holds more than half of the road-testing licenses granted by Chinese authorities nationwide.
In an updated leaderboard released by Navigant Research in March, Baidu was placed in the category of “contenders,” chasing the big three leaders—Waymo, GM Cruise, and Ford—along with Toyota and Volkswagen.
However, the company has faced questions over its leadership in terms of commercialization and technological supremacy in the industry, with its position being challenged by Pony.ai. Baidu faces a rough road ahead.
Once the darling of China’s nascent tech industry, search giant Baidu is now struggling to keep up with its rivals.
Facing intensifying competition for advertising revenue and stricter regulation governing content as well as a sharp decline in the public’s trust and the spectre of the US-China trade war, the company’s future is clouded by uncertainty. Investors have certainly noticed: Baidu’s share price has fallen more than a third to around $100 since the beginning of the year.
As the company’s lead in search and advertising narrows, diversification has become ever more important for Baidu, with the company putting great emphasis on its self-driving and artificial intelligence initiatives.
But the success of Baidu’s autonomous driving program comes at great cost, which may ultimately be hurting the company’s bottom line.
“The diversification of Baidu’s business from mobile internet to the smart home, smart transportation, cloud, and autonomous driving markets will require heavy investments,” Baidu CFO Herman Yu said in the company’s 2018 year-end results.
In May, Baidu reported its first loss since going public in 2005. Shortly afterwards, rumors began to proliferate about an impending spin-off of its self-driving unit.
Autonomous driving spin-offs, real and rumored, have been big news in China this year. As the effects of the country’s capital winter continue to take their toll, companies are looking to independently finance their autonomous driving units.
Baidu may not be an exception. The company took a hit in the first quarter, reporting a loss of around RMB 330 million (around $46 million)—its first since listing in 2005.
Company CEO Robin Li had previously said Baidu would spin off the unit once it was mature. However, a company spokesperson said earlier this year that it has no such plans, adding that Apollo is an important part of the company’s AI strategy.
Baidu, which has been named one of China’s five AI champions—alongside companies like Alibaba, Tencent, and Sensetime—has its self-driving cars in numerous cities in China, including 45 in Beijing and another 100 expected to be deployed in Changsha.
The costs of getting these vehicles on the road are significant, TechNode contributor and co-founder of China Money Network Nina Xiang wrote recently, with each vehicle costing up to RMB 2 million. The cars in Beijing and Changsha may cost up to RMB 300 million collectively.
The company does not break down its R&D spending by business group, but Baidu’s cost of research has increased by 40% over the past 18 months to reach RMB 4.7 billion.
Vehicles, coupled with the cost of hiring engineers, particularly those in the US, are compounding Baidu’s financial burdens. The company has repeatedly attributed rising R&D costs to personnel-related spending. Baidu has between 1,500 and 2,000 employees working on Apollo.
Meanwhile, Baidu’s profit has fallen dramatically in the past year, plummeting to around RMB 2 billion in the first half of 2019 from more than RMB 13 billion during the same period a year earlier.
A spin-off is necessary for a company like Baidu, says Tu Le, the founder of Sino Auto Insights. He added that the return on current research and development costs won’t be reflected in the company’s books for the next ten years.
While talk of spin-offs increases, investment in autonomous vehicles has stagnated, making money harder to come by. The number of investments in Chinese AV companies peaked at almost 100 last year, but saw a sharp decline in the first half of 2019, according to figures from ITJuzi.
Investors are beginning to look beyond the initial overconfidence of the AV industry, in which companies promised highly autonomous vehicles in a matter of years. Massive investments at sky-high valuations are unlikely, especially for a Baidu spin-off when there are startups with better technology and longer-running robotaxi schemes looking for cash.
]]>Artificial intelligence (AI) startup Yitu is considering a listing on China’s new Nasdaq-style tech board, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
Why it matters: News of the possible listing comes shortly after rival AI firm Megvii submitted an IPO prospectus to the Hong Kong stock exchange, the first Chinese AI company to make such a move.
Details: Yitu reportedly plans to list on Shanghai’s Star Market as early as this year, according to the Bloomberg report.
Context: The IPO plans come amid government calls to stimulate China’s high-tech development, with ambitions to become a world leader in AI by 2030.
Bottom line: China’s AI companies are looking to tap capital markets as venture funding slows and investors raise questions about the prospective profitability of these firms.
]]>Despite calls to regulate artificial intelligence on the battlefield, China’s tech sector is in danger of complicity in developing lethal autonomous weapons, as several companies have shown a keen interest in collaborations with the country’s public security organs.
Sensetime, the world’s most valuable AI startup, and facial recognition firm Yitu were cited by Dutch anti-war non-governmental organization PAX over concerns that their technology could be used for developing “killer robots” that could choose and engage targets without human intervention.
While Sensetime and Yitu’s products are currently not employed on the battlefield, the nature of those products as well as the companies’ history of working with China’s government is worrying, PAX says. In a recent report, the NGO referred to the two firms as being of “high concern.”
Sensetime and Yitu were not immediately available for comment.
PAX’s report ranks the possible complicity of tech companies according to the technologies they develop, past collaboration with law enforcement or the military, and whether they have pledged not to aid in the development of killer robots.
The report also mentions other Chinese tech firms, including Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent, though PAX classifies these companies as less of a concern.
PAX’s report comes amid increasing calls for caution over what has been dubbed the third revolution in warfare, after gunpowder and nuclear weapons. Around 30 countries currently support a ban on killer robots, and prominent figures from the research and tech communities, including Tesla’s Elon Musk, who spoke at a government-led AI conference in Shanghai this week, have warned of the dangers they present.
Currently, seven nations are developing lethal autonomous weapons, including the US and China. The projects under development include autonomous drones, as well as AI-equipped tanks and fighter jets, whose autonomy have raised alarm bells.
“Killer robots would be unable to apply either compassion or nuanced legal and ethical judgment to decisions to use lethal force,” Human Rights Watch said of the technology earlier this month.
In the US, tech companies including Google and Palantir have taken on government contracts, with applications ranging from analyzing drone footage to documenting immigrants. The same is true in China, where the private sector has filled government tenders to provide technology in a bid to ensure social stability.
PAX’s report raises questions over possible tech sector involvement in the race for the next generation of military technology, in which lucrative government contracts could provide significant incentives. Meanwhile, China holds an ambiguous stance toward autonomous weapons, supporting a ban on these arms while simultaneously pushing for the prohibition to exclude developing such weapons.
“It’s very clear that the Chinese military is very actively engaged in pursuing a number of applications of AI,” says Elsa Kania, an adjunct senior fellow who studies the modernization of China’s military at Center for a New American Security, a Washington DC-based think tank.
“In future battlegrounds, there will be no people fighting,” said Zeng Yi, a senior executive at Norinco, one of China’s biggest defense companies, at the Xiangshan Forum in Beijing last year.
The Xiangshan Forum is a big deal. With its focus on security in the Asia-Pacific region, it is to the Shangri-La Dialogue what the Boao Forum is to Davos. And Norinco is a key player in China’s defense industry; its products are used both domestically and internationally, including in the Middle East.
Zeng went on to predict that by 2025, autonomous weapons would be ubiquitous on the world’s battlegrounds, given the use of AI. “We are sure about the direction and that this is the future,” he added.
This kind of thinking has critics concerned. Much like the sprint to produce nuclear weapons during the Cold War, a push to develop autonomous weapons could lead to what PAX calls an “AI arms race,” in which various states compete to develop these weapons. Unlike nuclear arms, which act as a deterrent, autonomous weapons could make nations increasingly trigger-happy, as “you don’t have to put troops on the groups,” observers say.
Like most sectors earmarked for development, the government has put its might behind modernizing the military, creating an attractive proposition for tech startups. Daan Kayser, PAX’s project leader on autonomous weapons, told TechNode in a phone interview, “For Chinese companies, these could be quite lucrative projects, so there are economic reasons for getting involved.”
Financial incentives are evident in China’s surveillance sector, where companies like Sensetime, Yitu, and rival Megvii—which this week announced plans for a Hong Kong listing—have seen their profits swell on the back of government contracts.
While financial figures aren’t available for Sensetime and Yitu, documents filed with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange show that Megvii’s revenue reached almost RMB 1 billion ($133 million) in the first half of 2019, which the company attributes, in part, to government spending. The AI firm’s revenue in the first six months of this year was three times that of sales for the whole of 2017.
Sensetime, Yitu, Megvii, and Cloudwalk—also mentioned in PAX’s report—have all developed AI monitoring systems that help China’s police force keep tabs on its citizens by analyzing video and flagging persons of interest.
For example, Sensetime’s SenseTotem and SenseFace systems are currently being used by various police departments around China for this purpose. Meanwhile, Yitu’s tech is being used by public security organs in 20 provinces throughout the country.
“The government creates lucrative business opportunities by including these companies in its digital agenda. The companies, in turn, help secure political stability,” Sebastian Heilmann, the founding president of the Mercator Institute for China Studies, wrote in a blog post.
China’s government has also launched several state-driven investment initiatives focusing on private sector-military partnerships. As of the middle of this year, these funds had reached tens of billions of yuan.
Incentives to provide tech for killer robots could extend beyond monetary gain, as the Chinese government aims to promote an atmosphere of “civil-military fusion.” China’s army is looking to develop closer ties with the country’s private sector and research institutions.
China sees a need for these partnerships to drive a defense industry that has traditionally been viewed as unimaginative and a military that hasn’t been able to leverage commercial sector innovation. The enterprise is being overseen at the highest level, with Chinese president Xi Jinping leading the charge.
“Whenever there is a national initiative, there is pressure on companies to engage,” Kania said. She added that the military’s drive to forge close ties with civil society creates “more programs, and avenues, and opportunities” for businesses to work with the armed forces.
Despite rising pressure, companies are not being coerced into these sorts of partnerships. The characterization that the Chinese military has direct access to technology in the commercial sector is not accurate. Some tech companies have articulated interest in this type of work, while others have not—at least based on public information, Kania says.
Nevertheless, there is “absolutely a connection” between security and defense applications, she added, meaning that it wouldn’t be a stretch for companies that are involved in one to explore the other.
AI is central to developing autonomous weapons, and China is betting big on the technology. The country is catching up with the US and has overtaken the European Union in its capabilities, according to the Center for Data Innovation, a US-based think tank. The State Council, China’s cabinet, has announced plans to become a world leader in AI by 2030.
Meanwhile, the country’s Made in China 2025 initiative, which the country’s leaders have touted as the strategy for moving China up the industrial value chain, prioritizes the development of the robotics, aerospace and information technology industries. All of these sectors develop dual-use, military-civil technologies.
“The Chinese military believes that there is a revolution in military affairs underway in which AI could be critical to future military power,” Kania said.
These systems could be used in applications ranging from cyberdefense to creating weapons with ever-increasing levels of autonomy. Machine recognition, in particular, could prove to be extremely valuable in developing highly autonomous weapons, allowing these arms to not only “see” the world around them, but also to understand it and make decisions based on what they perceive.
The danger, according to Kayser, is that intelligent weapons could make decisions at a speed that is out of the realm of human capability. “If you can make decisions faster than your enemy, you’ll be able to beat them,” he said.
In June 2018, US search giant Google announced it would not renew a Pentagon contract to analyze drone video footage. Dubbed “Project Maven,” its aim had been simple: to use machine learning to improve the accuracy of drone strikes.
The tie-up came to an abrupt end. Thousands of Google’s employees signed a petition imploring the company to abandon the project, while many others resigned.
“We believe that Google should not be in the business of war,” the open letter to Google CEO Sundar Pichai began.
Similarly, the data analysis firm Palantir, founded by Facebook board member Peter Thiel, recently found itself at the center of controversy for its contracts with the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement to gather information about undocumented immigrants.
Similar opposition to tech companies working with the government has largely been absent in China.
“To my knowledge, there has not been any Chinese tech company that has been working with the Ministry of Public Security or the military where there has been any articulation of resistance to that engagement,” Kania said.
Regardless, countries working on these sorts of weapons are unlikely to stop as a result of public outcry. If even one nation pursues autonomous weapons, others will likely follow suit.
“These countries are looking at each other. The main rationale for exploring these sorts of technologies seems to be: ‘Our adversaries are also doing this,’” said Kayser.
]]>Lifestyle services giant Meituan is testing robot food delivery in Beijing and Shenzhen, as the company seeks to reduce operational costs, the South China Morning Post reported.
Why it matters: As labor demands increase, Meituan has been testing automated service robots in a bid to support growth and increase efficiency while controlling costs. The company currently has more than 600,000 delivery people and handles in excess of 25 million orders a day.
“We have done the calculation. If a delivery robot’s work life can last three years, the cost [of the robot] will not be higher than the labor cost.”
—Xia Huaxia, chief scientist of Meituan, to SCMP
Details: The company is testing indoor robots in 10 hotels and office buildings, which have already delivered thousands of orders, Xia said.
Context: Meituan first set up its unmanned delivery team in 2016 and launched its autonomous delivery platform in Beijing last year.
]]>Ride-hailing giant Didi will launch a pilot robotaxi fleet in Shanghai, allowing passengers to book rides in autonomous vehicles through its app, the company said on Friday.
Why it matters: Didi is the latest tech firm to announce plans to test a fleet of autonomous taxis in China, following similar initiatives by search giant Baidu and self-driving startup Pony.ai.
“We believe that giving ordinary citizens access to large scale, shared autonomous fleets is key to achieving our shared goal of safety, efficiency, and sustainability for future cities.”
—Didi CEO Cheng Wei in a statement on Friday
Details: The pilot program will feature 30 different models of Level 4 autonomous vehicles—cars that are fully driverless in most scenarios, the company said.
Context: With around 550 million users, Didi is the largest ride-hailing company in China.
The vast majority of people underestimate the capabilities of artificial intelligence (AI) and its possible effects on the future of humanity, Tesla CEO Elon Musk said at a government-led conference in Shanghai on Thursday.
Why it matters: The Tesla and SpaceX CEO was debating Alibaba founder Jack Ma on the merits of AI during the opening ceremony of the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC).
“There’s just a smaller and smaller corner of intellectual pursuits that humans are better than computers and every year it gets smaller. Soon we will be far surpassed in every single way.”
—Elon Musk at WAIC
Details: While Musk took his usual pessimistic approach to issues of AI, Ma spun a more optimistic thread, saying he’s not worried about the evolution of the technology.
Context: The future of human-machine interaction has garnered much attention over the past few years. Concerns over algorithmic bias, unemployment, and the future economic system have come to the fore, with experts calling for these issues to be dealt with before its too late.
National artificial intelligence (AI) plans, including those drafted by China, should promote international collaboration, not just permit it, according to Tom Mitchell, former dean of Carnegie Mellon University’s computer science school.
Why it matters: Mitchell, known as the father of machine learning, was speaking at the opening ceremony of the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai on Thursday.
“What I think these national strategies need is a distinction that says for win-win applications the rational strategy for every country is not just to allow collaboration but actually to promote it. And to find ways to, for example, share medical data internationally, and share algorithms and the hard engineering work.”
—Tom Mitchell, at WAIC on Thursday
Details: Mitchell said that AI applications in healthcare, education, and smart cities could benefit from researchers in different countries working together.
Context: China has laid out goals that policymakers hope will make the country an AI trailblazer by 2030.
Shanghai has formed a RMB 500 million ($70 million) fund to boost its drone industry and lure drone makers to the city with subsidies and preferential policies.
Why it matters: Shanghai aims to become a global tech powerhouse. The city has already laid out plans to become an artificial intelligence hub and has set its sights on becoming a world “e-sports capital.”
Details: Shanghai’s Jinshan District has implemented 18 policies to attract businesses to the city, including covering up to 20% of a firm’s budget to build research and development centers in the city.
Context: Jinshan hopes to attract up to 100 domestic and international drone makers by 2021.
Alibaba-backed artificial intelligence (AI) startup Megvii has applied for a Hong Kong listing, coming at a time of political unrest in the city and broader economic uncertainty.
Why it matters: Megvii’s facial recognition technology is used widely around China in applications ranging from mobile payments to surveillance, with the company being a key supplier to China’s public security organs.
Details: Megvii did not disclose how much the company seeks to raise in documents submitted to the Stock Exchange of Hong Kong, but estimates range from $500 million to $1 billion, according to people cited by Reuters and Bloomberg.
Context: Megvii is one of a handful of startups at the forefront of China’s AI boom, including Sensetime, Yitu, and Cloudwalk, though none of them have yet gone public.
China’s state-sponsored hackers are showing increased interest in acquiring foreign healthcare research and patient data, as the country grapples with rising cancer rates and an overstretched medical sector, according to cybersecurity researchers.
Why it matters: Aside from concerns over mortality rates, China has a rapidly expanding pharmaceutical industry, which creates lucrative opportunities for homegrown companies that provide oncology treatments and services.
“One theme FireEye has observed among Chinese cyber espionage actors targeting the healthcare sector is the theft of large sets of personally identifiable information and personal health information, most notably with several high-profile breaches of US organizations in 2015.”
—Researchers wrote in a report published this week
Details: US-based cybersecurity firm FireEye said in its report that multiple APT groups had specifically targeted cancer-related research.
Chinese state-backed hackers are turning to cybercrime for profit
Context: Chinese state actors have been accused of attacking foreign firms to accelerate the country’s progress via intellectual property theft.
Autonomous trucks hold more immediate promise for deployment than robotaxis, industry experts say. Compared to complex city roads—where a myriad of challenges abound, from navigating heavy congestion to watching out for jaywalkers—highways and lonely ports are relatively easy to navigate.
While a number of companies developing autonomous trucks are focusing on full autonomy, it’s not strictly necessary. More immediate applications lie in the realm of semi-autonomous rigs.
China-backed Tusimple is one of the pioneers of highly autonomous trucks, which can drive themselves under certain road conditions. Founded in 2015, the San Diego- and Beijing-based startup has secured $178 million in funding. It is now worth a whopping $1.1 billion, making it the world’s first autonomous trucking unicorn.
Late last year, Chen Mo, the CEO of Tusimple, said the company was working at “almost the same speed” as Waymo in terms of commercialization.
The claim may sound overconfident, but Chen was later vindicated. This year Tusimple won a contract from the United States Postal Service (USPS) to carry letters and packages between Phoenix, Arizona and Dallas, Texas—a 1,600-kilometer trip. It may only have been a two-week pilot, but it marked the first time that USPS contracted with an AV company for long-haul services, and it gave Tusimple, a company with Chinese roots, a chance to validate its system with a US government agency.
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Like Waymo, Tusimple aims to reach full autonomy and plans to run a fleet of 1,500 cargo-hauling trucks by the end of 2021. Hou Xiaodi, founder and CTO of Tusimple, said earlier this year that it is now on track to take “drivers out” of the trips starting next year.
The company claims that its proprietary deep-learning algorithms could enable vehicle to “see” the road a kilometer ahead, which sets it apart from other AV companies, including Waymo. Tusimple equips each vehicle with nine cameras, two lidars, one forward radar, and an onboard computing platform. All this technology costs around $200,000 per vehicle.
On top of these costs, the company employs around 400 staff members focused on engineering and marketing. Each truck now earns several thousand dollars on average each week, Chen said, though this does little to help profitability.
Aiming to reduce costs and kickstart commercial use, the company is looking at C-V2X (cellular vehicle-to-everything) for communications, a networking solution for vehicle connectivity that the Chinese government has put its clout behind.
The technology allows sensors and software to be deployed on road-mounted devices, which could reduce the costs of autonomous trucks. Data from the road could be sent to robo-rigs and combined with the trucks’ own data in real time. The system will allow detection of traffic scenarios that onboard sensors are currently relied on to complete.
China plans to use wireless communication solutions and sensors for connectivity on 90% of highways in the country by 2020. However, C-V2X is still a nascent technology with a multitude of issues that need addressing, including how to transmit data from road signs to driverless vehicles, as well as real-time onboard computing.
Revamping public road infrastructure also requires substantial amounts of money, meaning that only major Chinese cities are currently able to make the investment. Also, the technology used in one city may not be compatible with vehicles from other regions.
This would restrict the technology from being used on long-distance trips, said Wu Nan, the vice president of Tusimple, during a panel discussion at this year’s Mobile World Congress in Shanghai. Thus far, the company sees little hope of any practical applications of C-V2X in the near-term.
Finally, concerns from lawmakers and the public are the biggest obstacle to realizing the vision of completely autonomous trucks on the road. Currently, the US laws regulating highly autonomous driving require that a driver be behind the wheel at all times, ready to take over operations if needed. Meanwhile, public road testing for trucks hasn’t even started in China.
While driver shortages in the US are likely to double to 160,000 in the next ten years, autonomous trucks could replace up to 300,000 long-distance truck drivers in the US over the course of the next two decades. Society will have to make some hard choices between protecting current livelihoods and maximizing incentives from new industries.
As the industry struggles with technological issues and money gets tighter, support in China is growing for another approach: conditional autonomy.
As the name implies, a truck with conditional autonomy—also known as a Level 3 vehicle—can drive itself under certain traffic or environmental conditions, but still requires a driver to take the wheel if necessary. Admittedly, the concept sounds less thrilling when compared to Level 4 and Level 5 technology, in which the vehicle’s performance is equal to that of a human driver.
Nor is conditional autonomy without its concerns. Auto giants such as Mercedes and Volvo question the safety of handing over control from vehicle to human driver, as well as the effects of the continuous transitions on the driving experience. Nevertheless, because full autonomy is still a long way off, companies such as the Chinese autonomous truck startup Inceptio believe that Level 3 capability is a mandatory stage of the process to transform the logistics industry.
China is a country of diverse climates, landscapes, and traffic conditions. These conditions require truck drivers to be highly skilled, with wide-ranging knowledge of routes, vehicles, and even the cargo that they haul. Julian Ma, Inceptio CEO and a former Tencent vice president, has said that the role of truck driver is a manual job, and there is no way to increase profits under the current non-standardized business model.
Founded last year by Tencent-backed fleet management company G7, Asia’s largest warehouse operator GLP, and Nio-backed venture capital firm Nio Capital, Inceptio unveiled the first generation of its autonomous driving solution in Shanghai at this year’s CES Asia. The company claims that its “full-stack solution” could enable a truck to deal with multiple complex tasks including automatic braking, lane changing, and even U-turns in different situations.
Once they begin to operate on a large scale, semi-autonomous trucks could standardize the industry, allowing an inexperienced yet licensed driver to undertake any trip, Ma says. He added that logistics costs could be reduced by at least 10% and that drivers will not have to work long hours in poor conditions, as long-haul trips could be divided into several relay-like segments. The company aims to bring its customized robo-rigs to market at scale by the end of 2021, running a delivery network with a fleet of at least 50,000 vehicles nationwide.
Although the Level 3 goals are more realistic, the developers working on Level 3 technology still face a variety of challenges that would never be encountered by robotaxi companies.
One such issue is related to automobile controls.. Since cargo delivery involves the circulation of shipping containers, sensors must be installed on the truck tractors themselves and combined with algorithms of vehicle modeling and controller design that help vehicles cruise along the roads.
Also, the weight and position of the cargo inside the container has an effect on the motion of the truck, making it harder to control during the trip.
Engineers need to test specific problems and corresponding solutions, taking into consideration a multitude of other factors, including tire pressure and the roughness of the road. Currently, Tusimple is still unable to transport liquid goods because sloshing within containers shifts weight, said Chen.
Despite these challenges, Inceptio is still convinced these issues can be solved with time and effort. The company is currently testing autonomous trucks in Shanghai, the northern Chinese city of Baoding, and Changsha, the capital of Hunan province. Changsha is expected to open 200 kilometers of highways and urban roads for autonomous tests by the end of the year. Inceptio, which holds one of the two permits awarded to autonomous trucking companies, believes that the ability to test and troubleshoot in Changsha will give it an edge in the race towards the mass use of autonomous trucks in China.
]]>Chinese policies governing civil-military fusion could limit the country’s plans to become a world leader in artificial intelligence (AI), according to a new report, as distrust of companies linked to the Chinese government grows amid US-China tensions.
Why it matters: China has set ambitious goals to become a world leader in AI by 2030 in order to move the country up the industrial value chain.
“‘Civil-military’ integration makes it harder for [China’s] firms to succeed in the global market because such policies foster distrust in other societies. A lack of trust will hinder Chinese firms’ ability to acquire significant global market share outside of nations that are taking part in China’s subsidized Digital Silk Road initiatives.”
—US-based think tank Center for Data Innovation (CDI) wrote in a report
Details: China has shown interest in the military applications of AI, along with the US and other countries. While China has voiced support for a ban on the use of autonomous weapons at the United Nations, it still supports developing so-called “killer robots.”
Context: A number of companies, both foreign and Chinese, have faced international repercussions and censure for their work in China and with the country’s government.
Search giant Baidu’s second-quarter net income fell more than 60% year on year despite beating revenue expectations, as the company reels from increasing competition and the effects of the US-China trade war.
Why it matters: Baidu reported its first quarterly loss since going public in 2005 during the first three months of the year.
“Although the increase in ad inventory in the market has impacted the overall growth rate of the company’s services, it’s fair to say that a bigger part of our revenue slowdown can be attributed to self-directed healthcare initiatives and a softening of macroeconomic conditions.”
—Herman Yu, Baidu chief financial officer, said during an earnings call on Tuesday morning
Details: Baidu’s net income dropped to RMB 2.4 billion (around $340 million) in the second quarter from RMB 6.4 billion during the same period last year.
Context: Baidu share price has fallen by 34% this year, which was accelerated by poor financial results in the first quarter.
Cracks are emerging in China’s ride-hailing sector as dominant companies seek to monetize their rivals, a move which could divide the industry as smaller firms are forced to choose sides.
Major mobility players Didi and Meituan have opened up their platforms to competitors by offering aggregation services that allow users to access multiple ride-hailing platforms within a single app.
Meituan launched its aggregation service in April, allowing the company to spread its ride-hailing offering from Nanjing and Shanghai to dozens of cities around the country. The company enables users to book trips using its own ride-hailing services, as well as through Shouqi Limousine & Chauffeur, Caocao Chuxing, and Shenzhou, among others.
Didi followed suit just weeks later, announcing that a number of automakers would be able to provide ride-hailing within its app, deepening its ties with carmakers in the country and further expanding its reach.
The ride aggregation model has sprung up as a result of problems in the market. Companies have been left reeling from the aftereffects of a government clampdown on the industry while facing trouble reaching profitability.
Previously, map providers Autonavi and Baidu had launched aggregation services within their apps—as had the travel services platform Ctrip. Meituan and Didi’s adoption of the model marks the first time that companies whose business involves ride-hailing have made such moves.
The move has sparked concerns. “Smaller companies are going to be forced to take sides,” Tu Le, founder at Sino Auto Insights, told TechNode. “As a small ride-hailing firm you don’t want to be exclusive.”
In the new paradigm, ride-hailing companies are required to pay Didi or Meituan a commission for every ride that gets booked through the tech giants’ apps. While these services give smaller players access to a larger pool of potential customers, costs could quickly escalate as these companies also need to pay their drivers.
“Smaller players will need to consider carefully which open platform to join for them to remain relevant in the market,” Tom De Vleesschauwer, director at research firm IHS Markit, told TechNode in an email.
Experts say these types of partnerships could create additional problems for an already embattled industry. Smaller players will need to balance commission costs with increased scale, which could ultimately affect their bottom line. Meanwhile, companies like Didi and Meituan will be able to benefit from other operators’ rides, but in doing so, have been accused of putting their own interests above their drivers’.
China is home to the world’s largest ride-hailing market. In 2016, the sector was worth more than $20 billion, according to consulting firm Bain & Co. Nevertheless, the industry has seen a series of existential crises that have diminished its supply of drivers, the lifeblood of the ride-hailing sector.
“In downtown areas such as [Beijing’s] Sanlitun or Wangjing, you always have to wait for a ride at night or during the weekend, with at least 55 passengers in line ahead of you,” 25-year-old resident Li Lan told TechNode.
The aggregation mode could help companies like Didi and Meituan address this issue, analysts say. These firms can significantly increase the number of rides within their apps without notable investment, as they are not responsible for paying the extra drivers, a major cost for any ride-hailing network.
China’s driver shortage stems from a government crackdown on the industry following a series of high-profile tragedies last year. In two separate incidents, female passengers were murdered by their drivers while using Didi’s carpooling service Hitch.
Shortly after the incidents, numerous investigations found that passenger harassment was rampant within the industry. Didi suspended Hitch indefinitely but has hinted that the company is looking to bring the platform back online.
Didi, which accounts for 90% of rides in China’s ride-hailing market, responded aggressively to the incidents by implementing security functions and upgrading those that already existed. Safety has now become a priority for the company.
However, Didi and Meituan are not expected to be accountable for the actions of drivers from the other platforms, Le says, meaning liability still falls on the smaller platforms that actually run the rides. It’s unlikely that the new mode will address ongoing safety concerns.
A Didi spokepson told TechNode on Tuesday that it’s open platform will enable the company to share its experience in driver management and safety architecture with its partners. Meituan declined to comment.
In light of the safety concerns, the government was also swift in cracking down on the sector, requiring drivers to hold permits in order to get fares. The cities of Beijing, Shanghai, and Tianjin demand that drivers hold licenses from the city in which they operate; this drastically reduces the supply of drivers, as gig workers often live in cities in which they are not registered.
Other barriers include requiring drivers to register their cars as commercial vehicles and pass an exam to get the necessary paperwork.
Didi has removed more than 300,000 unqualified or fraudulent drivers from its platform since the incidents. The government of Shanghai recently fined the company RMB 5.5 million for allowing unqualified drivers on its platform.
Didi has sought to counter these removals and reduce friction by running training services to help drivers become compliant with the government’s rules. The effects of this program are currently unclear. The company said previously that it is unable to service around one-fifth of the rides on its low-cost Express service due to labor shortages.
“Didi was always going to become a platform for various types of transportation. They just opened it to other ride-hailing companies, so their volume is a lot higher,” Le said.
It is unclear how many drivers Meituan has had to remove, though the number of drivers on its platform is limited when compared to Didi.
Apart from addressing a lack of drivers, aggregating rides from other platforms could help these companies cut costs, according to an expert at a consulting firm affiliated to an automotive industry body; this source was granted anonymity as they are not authorized to speak to the media.
The model will allow more dominant companies to cut their customer acquisition and retention spending, as well as reduce subsidies, the source said.
Ride-hailing companies globally are struggling to make money. In its first-quarter results, Meituan said that it would be taking a “cost-effective approach” to its ride-hailing business, implementing an aggregation model while scaling back subsidies.
The company’s cost of revenue in 2018 increased year-on-year to more than RMB 15 billion ($2.1 billion) from RMB 1.1 billion. Meituan attributed the increase, in part, to expenditure on drivers. The company spent as much as RMB 370 million a month on drivers last year.
Meanwhile, Didi has yet to turn a profit. The company reportedly marked huge losses of RMB 10.9 billion in 2018. Earlier this year, Didi reported that its operating costs were roughly equivalent to 21% of its total fare revenues in 2018. However, its average commission rate was 19% of its fare revenue in the fourth quarter of last year. The 2-percentage point difference was reported as an operating loss.
The company will focus on reducing costs to run its businesses in a “sustainable way,” said Chen Xi, executive president of Didi’s ride-hailing business group, in a statement in April.
Aggregation services allow major players to offer more rides to their users, while not having to spend extra to provide them. De Vleesschauwer says that leaders in the industry see the model as a way to increase scale, and thereby revenue, as no one is in the sector is making money.
Given the increased accessibility, users on microblogging platform Weibo voiced their support of the model, saying that it would make it easier to book rides and cut down on wait times.
“Passengers are free to choose vehicles and vehicle providers,“ said one supporter of the model. “After gathering more drivers and vehicles, passengers can also get a car more easily,” noted another commenter.
However, other Weibo users who appeared to be drivers voiced their concerns, saying that aggregating rides puts the companies and their customers before drivers.
“Drivers are earning less and less,” said one user, commenting on an article about Didi’s aggregation service. “This does not consider the drivers at all,” wrote another.
But the effects of the aggregation mode extend further than just concerns over drivers, pointing to consolidation within the industry. De Vleesschauwer said that smaller ride-hailing companies having to choose between aligning themselves with Meituan or Didi is a “distinct” possibility. No exclusivity agreements have yet been made public.
For smaller platforms, Meituan and Didi’s huge user bases are an attractive proposition. Didi has more than 550 million users across China, while Meituan has around 410 million in its platform, which also includes food delivery and other lifestyle services.
Didi said that its partnerships, particularly those with carmakers, will help users find suitable rides, while giving its partners access to its large pool of passengers, thereby increasing their efficiency and income.
It is unclear how much Didi or Meituan will charge the smaller platforms, but some sources point to a minimum figure of 10%, which could increase costs dramatically for cash-strapped ride-hailing companies.
“Ultimately, whoever controls the platform will hold the power,” said De Vleesschauwer. Smaller companies could effectively become local power bases for Didi or Meituan, he added.
Additional reporting by Jill Shen
This article has been updated to include a response from Didi
]]>Search giant Baidu is no longer one of China’s five most valuable companies, as the company struggles to keep up with competitors that encroach further into its primary markets, Bloomberg reports.
Why it matters: Baidu has seen increasing competition from rivals Tencent and Bytedance, which are enticing advertisers and users with their short video and social media apps.
Details: Internet giant NetEase overtook Baidu in market value after posting its earnings last week. Baidu’s share price has fallen by 40% this year, while NetEase, China’s second-largest gaming company, gained 11%.
Context: Baidu has commanded the internet search market in China since Google’s departure in 2010. However, the company is now facing competition from upstart Bytedance, which launched its own search engine this month.
Overcollection of personal data is rampant in apps from Chinese apps stores, with companies typically collecting more than 20 pieces of information about a user and their device, a non-profit cybersecurity center in China has warned.
Why it matters: China is cracking down on apps that over-collect personal information, as data theft remains a widespread issue, and companies fail to protect users.
Details: China’ s National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team (CN-CERT) said in its first-half report for 2019 that apps request an average of 25 permissions when installed.
“The illegal use of personal information has become a prominent issue, and the majority of internet users have reacted strongly to it.” —CN-CERT said in its report published this week.
Context: Data breaches have become a significant problem in China, where the illicit market for personal data is enormous.
Tencent-backed developer Epic Games is facing a class-action lawsuit after a data breach allowed hackers to access data from millions of its users.
Why it matters: The breach affected players of “Fortnite,” which gaming and social media giant Tencent brought to China prior to a government freeze on game approvals in the country last year.
“Affected Fortnite users have suffered an ascertainable loss in that they have had fraudulent charges made to their credit or debit cards and must undertake additional security measures.”
—Franklin D. Azar & Associates, which filed the class-action suit in North Carolina, US
Chinese state-backed hackers are turning to cybercrime for profit
Details: Researchers at US-based cybersecurity intelligence firm Check Point discovered a number of vulnerabilities in Epic Games’ online platform late last year. They said the weaknesses may have allowed hackers to take over user accounts, access personal data, and purchase in-game virtual currency V-bucks.
Context: The gaming industry is an attractive target for hackers, due to the wealth of data created and the exchange of fiat to in-game currencies.
Venture capitalist and Facebook board member Peter Thiel has reiterated his stance on Google’s presence in China, saying that it is “unprecedented” for a company to refuse contracts with the US military while seeking greater interaction with China.
Why it matters: Google has faced heightened scrutiny for its presence in China following revelations that it was working on a censored search engine to comply with Chinese laws.
Details: Thiel claimed that even if Google isn’t working with the Chinese military, the technology the company develops in the country “gets handed on.” Thiel, who is also founder of controversial data-mining company Palantir, made the comments in an interview with Fox News on Sunday.
Context: Google’s AI research lab in Beijing has become a major point of contention, as critics say draw attention to the possible military applications of the technology the search giant develops in China.
Hackers have attempted to steal information from Chinese government employees by faking email login pages for several high profile agencies and state-owned enterprises, cybersecurity researchers say.
Why it matters: The apparent espionage attempt may be linked to an advanced persistent threat (APT) group, an organization that accesses private information for a prolonged period while remaining undetected. The offensive began as early as the second half of 2018.
“By stealing email credentials, and accessing internal email content, it would be possible to gain insight into what decisions are being made within the target organization and could lead to the theft of sensitive information.”
—Cybersecurity researchers said in a report published on Thursday
Details: US-based cybersecurity firm Anomali said that hackers impersonated websites to trick employees from government agencies and state-owned firms to log in to the spoof services, thereby giving up their email usernames and passwords.
Context: APT groups are garnering increased amounts of attention around the world, according to China’ s National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team (CN-CERT), a cybersecurity center affiliated with the government.
A group of Chinese state-backed hackers is also launching financially motivated attacks for personal gain in what cybersecurity researchers call a “remarkable” deviation from a singular focus on espionage.
Why it matters: The group, dubbed Advanced Persistent Threat 41 (APT41), is known for having targeted the healthcare, high-tech, and telecommunications sectors in 14 countries ranging from the US to Turkey and South Africa.
“APT41 carries out an array of financially motivated intrusions, particularly against the video game industry, including stealing source code and digital certificates, virtual currency manipulation, and attempting to deploy ransomware.”
—Cybersecurity researchers wrote in their report
Details: The researchers from cybersecurity firm FireEye said the group’s skills gained from cybercrime activities have ultimately supported its state-sponsored operations.
Context: APT41 is just one Chinese Advanced Persistent Threat group that FireEye tracks. Others include APT40, APT30, and APT19.
Consider all the possible benefits of robotaxis: increased mobility, lower costs, fewer vehicles on the roads, and more free time on daily commutes. Fleets of self-driving cabs are expected to have disruptive effects on transportation in cities around the world.
Despite all this promise, however, international trailblazers are currently scaling back their plans to deploy automated mobility services worldwide. GM’s Cruise is downsizing its plans to deploy robotaxis. Alphabet’s Waymo launched self-driving taxi services late last year, but vehicles are still only available to about 400 test families in the suburbs of Phoenix, Arizona. These cars are also required to have safety drivers behind the wheel in case a human is required to take over in a dangerous situation.
Meanwhile, Chinese self-driving companies are pushing to lead the global race to deploy self-driving taxis. AutoX is expanding its presence, with plans to offer self-driving rides in Europe by the end of 2020. Baidu has set an ambitious goal to roll out 100 self-driving taxis in Changsha by year-end. Pony.ai and WeRide have been testing driverless ride-hailing in Guangzhou for months.
Despite the international setbacks, robotaxis are seen as a possible answer to the regulatory, financial, and scale problems facing AVs. Many believe they could pave the way to widespread adoption of self-driving cars.
Changsha and Guangzhou are the two major Chinese cities aiming to rise above the rest in the country’s AV race.
Drive I/O is TechNode’s monthly newsletter on the cutting edge of mobility: EVs, AVs, and the companies trying to build them. Available to TechNode Squared subscribers.
You’d be forgiven for not having heard of Changsha. The capital of Hunan province, located in central China, has not been called the famed “metropolis of the future,” as Shenzhen has. Nor is it an important political hub akin to Beijing or a commercial center like Shanghai. However, the future of automated driving could be playing out in this city.
Changsha wasn’t the first city to allow AV tests in China. In fact, it didn’t open its first pilot zone for AVs until June 2018, two years later than Shanghai, and also lagging behind Beijing and six other cities in China.
But Changsha strode into the spotlight in late 2018, when the municipal government announced its plan to become the first Chinese city to roll out robotaxis in 2019, and unveiled a partnership with Baidu, the online search and artificial intelligence giant that has been named one of China’s “AI champions.” Baidu declared that Changsha would be second only to Beijing in its goals to put autonomous vehicles on the road.
For a long time, AV companies were only allowed to test self-driving cars in Changsha’s closed pilot zone, located west of the Xiangjiang River, which divides the city in two. The testing zone originally incorporated just 12 kilometers of road networks. But the city has dramatically accelerated its efforts to deploy self-driving cars.
In June of this year, the city government issued nearly 50 permits for road testing, the vast majority of which were granted to Baidu. Officials are also revamping around 200 kilometers of public roads, aiming to add connectivity features for self driving cars. The roads are expected to be put into use in September.
The overhaul will allow safety drivers to oversee autonomous vehicles on 36 urban streets, including highways in several areas around the city. Qiu Jixing, the deputy mayor, claimed at a June press event that Changsha would be home to the largest open-road networks for autonomous tests in the country.
The city now hopes to take the lead in AV deployment, with plans to run 100 of Baidu’s robotaxis on its motorways. Chinese media reported last month that recruitment of volunteers for Baidu’s early rider program will begin in September.
In June, Changsha authorities took deliberate steps towards deployment by stipulating explicit rules for transporting passengers in robotaxis. The regulations state that only AV companies whose vehicles have traveled more than 20,000 kilometers in the city without traffic violations are eligible. First-time applicants must run a maximum of 30 cars for at least half a year before applying to put more vehicles on the road.
Changsha is often referred to as “China’s Phoenix,” drawing comparisons to the Arizona metropolis—neither city was the most prosperous in their respective countries nor were they pioneers when the competition for next-generation smart vehicles started up.
Like Phoenix, now a global hub for the evolution of the driverless vehicle industry, Changsha is expected to play a pivotal role in AV development and deployment, especially given its relatively docile traffic environment, government support, and drive to become China’s AV trailblazer.
Guangzhou was also late to allow AV testing on its streets. The capital of Guangdong province was the last of China’s four first-tier cities—which also include Beijing, Shenzhen, and Shanghai—to issue testing licenses. But that hasn’t dampened the southern city’s ambitions to lead the nationwide AV race.
Guangzhou has gone even further than Changsha. For months, the city has allowed self-driving companies Pony.ai and WeRide to test autonomous ride-hailing platforms. The two startups are also testing their vehicles in the US. Last year, the company ranked fifth out of all autonomous driving companies testing vehicles in California when measuring disengagements, the number of times a human driver is required to take over from the vehicles autonomous system.
Pony.ai reported just one disengagement for every 1,645 kilometers traveled, according to the state’s motor vehicle department.
In December, Pony.ai began testing its autonomous ride-hailing service Pony Pilot in Guangzhou’s urban Nansha District. The test area now covers 60 square kilometers. Pony.ai claims that trips can be made between any two points within the test area, rather than just trips based on fixed routes. The company said the longest possible journey lasts two hours.
Xie Xiaohui, chief of the Commerce Bureau of Nansha District, told state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV): “Pony.ai can test their vehicles on all the roads with 24-hour access in Nansha.” Thus far, only employees and a limited pool of volunteers have access to the service via an invite-only app. Pony.ai has said it will expand its ride-hailing fleet to 100 vehicles by the end of 2019.
Despite its current limitations, the company has set ambitious goals, hoping to catch up with Waymo. “It would be a great mission for us to challenge the best technology in the world in the next several years,” said Zhang Ning, head of Pony.ai’s Guangzhou research and development center, during a recent interview with CCTV.
For rival WeRide, second only to Baidu in the number of road testing licenses it has secured in China, robotaxis are of the utmost importance. “In Guangzhou, we can apply to offer transport services to the public after driving safely for 10,000 kilometers. This means more to us than California’s robotaxi permit,” the company told TechNode. The company received 20 of the 24 test permits issued by Guangzhou’s government in June.
WeRide is indeed also testing its vehicles in California, reporting 280 kilometers per disengagement, though it hasn’t received a robotaxi license in the US, unlike rivals Pony.ai and AutoX.
Nonetheless, the company has been testing its robotaxi service for eight months on a small suburban island in Guangzhou. They plan to launch the service with taxi operator Baiyun in 2020.
Guangzhou allows companies to test vehicles on 33 public roads totaling 46 kilometers in length, although more than half of the roads have little traffic volume. It is also unclear how many residents the companies could target in these areas and when they will be able to charge for their services.
Still, Guangzhou has grand ambitions of being the global center of the automotive industry in the era of shared mobility. The city aims to take the top spot in terms of auto production in China, planning to produce 5 million vehicles by 2025. Of these, the city hopes 80% will be equipped with semi-automated driving systems, much higher than the 30% target set by the central government.
Formerly known as home to Japanese automakers in China and already the country’s second-largest city in car production volume, Guangzhou is now pushing to pave the road in the smart mobility revolution.
Credit: Jill, Chris
]]>Facebook has sued a Hong Kong-based developer for allegedly implanting malware into Android apps that created fake clicks on the social network’s ads.
Why it matters: The case is the latest in a series of offensives against Chinese companies found to be injecting malware in apps for financial gain.
Details: Hong Kong-based LionMobi allegedly engaged in “click injection fraud” to generate fake clicks on ads displayed on a smartphone. LionMobi was not immediately available for comment when TechNode reached out on Wednesday.
“LionMobi and JediMobi generated unearned payouts from Facebook for misrepresenting that a real person had clicked on the ads.” —Jessica Romero, Facebook’s director of Platform Enforcement and Litigation
Context: Tech companies are clamping down on malicious software that generates fraudulent revenue for app developers. The practice hurts companies like Facebook and Google, which rely on ads to drive revenue.
China’s largest search engine Baidu and ride-hailing platform Didi have beefed up their anti-graft campaigns, dismissing more than 40 employees and reporting wrongdoings to the police.
Why it matters: Increasing numbers of Chinese tech firms have launched anti-corruption campaigns as they seek to mimic the Chinese state’s approach to misconduct.
“Any employee who violates the law will not be tolerated. Serious cases will be sent to the public security department.” —Baidu wrote in a leaked email last week. The company confirmed the authenticity of the email to TechNode on Monday.
Details: Baidu dismissed 14 employees that were allegedly involved in 12 cases of internal corruption, the company said in its email. Allegations include bribery and infringing on trade secrets, among others.
Context: To encourage honest work, JD earlier this year went as far as sending employees on a prison tour in Beijing.
China is looking to crack down on its logistics sector, with plans to add companies that mishandle personal data to a social credit blacklist, according to a document published by the country’s top national planning agency on Thursday.
Why it matters: China’s logistics sector is driven by the world’s largest e-commerce market. Given the volume of personal information needed to collect and deliver goods, there is room for mishandling and leaking private information.
Details: The draft document released by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) is open for comment until August 14, the government body said in a statement.
Context: China has laid out plans to create an oft-discussed social credit system, the backbone of which is expected to be completed by 2020.
A group of Chinese researchers has created a chip that combines conventional computing architecture with that inspired by the human brain, a development the team claims could lead to more generalized artificial intelligence (AI), according to research published this week in Nature.
Why it matters: China has laid out ambitious goals for its AI development, aiming to be a world leader in the technology by 2030. However, the country is largely dependent on foreign-made chips to provide the computing power for its intelligent platforms.
“Our study is expected to stimulate AGI development by paving the way to more generalized hardware platform.”
— Authors of the research wrote in Nature.
Details: The chip, dubbed Tianjic, was developed by Shi Luping, an academic at Tsinghua University, along with a team of researchers largely based in China.
Context: The US-China trade war has drawn attention to China’s dependence on foreign-made technology, with US lawmakers using this reliance as a bargaining chip.
Ride-hailing firm Didi and social media giant Tencent will set up a cybersecurity lab to deal with online and offline threats that could potentially affect their operations amid intensified government scrutiny.
Why it’s important: China is home to the world’s largest internet population. As the domestic internet has flourished, so too has an illicit market for personal data, which bad actors have used to conduct fraud, identity theft, and blackmail.
Details: Didi and Tencent announced the partnership on Tuesday, which will focus on information security, business security, and protection for emerging technologies including connected and autonomous vehicles.
Context: The Chinese government is intensifying its push to improve data protection in the country, calling for companies to answer for offenses such as overcollection of personal information as well as data breaches.
A slew of Chinese firms that run popular smartphone apps have found themselves in hot water after regulators found that they had not sufficiently protected their users’ data.
Why it matters: The investigation is the latest in a series of crackdowns by Chinese regulators, aimed at stemming the overcollection of personal data as people become more aware of the danger of breaches.
Details: The apps had access to excessive amounts of user data, the regulators said. Apps were censured for collecting personal information without users’ approval and not providing clear data protection guidelines, according to the cross-industry team that conducted the investigation.
Context: With the explosion of online services in China comes the risk of data falling into the wrong hands. Data breaches in the world’s most populated country are common, with personal data going for as little as RMB 1 ($0.15) in some cases.
Chinese smartphone manufacturers continued to see explosive growth in India during the second quarter, edging out international competitors as they battle for market share in the world’s second-most populated country, according to data from research firm Canalys.
Why it matters: Chinese smartphone makers are looking abroad to boost sales while shipments in their home market slow as a result of high rates of smartphone penetration and a slowing economy.
Details: Four of the top five most popular smartphone brands in India are Chinese. Xiaomi takes the top spot, controlling nearly a third of the Indian market, up 4% year on year, according to the Canalys report released on Monday.
“[Vivo’s] current trajectory would see it displace Samsung by the end of 2019, dealing a major blow to the Korean vendor.”
—Jin Shengtao, Canalys analyst
Context: Chinese smartphone makers are increasingly relying on international sales in order to offset stalling shipments in China, the world’s largest smartphone market.
Baidu is investigating how online search results for a line of political thought attributed to President Xi Jinping guided users to a video clip appearing to ridicule the Chinese leader, Bloomberg reported.
Why it matters: Baidu has long faced scrutiny for the quality of its search results. The company has been accused of promoting content from its own platforms and hosting questionable ads for healthcare services.
Baidu declined to comment when reached by TechNode on Friday.
Details: Baidu users looking for information about Xi’s “Four Greats,” a doctrine developed by the Chinese leader, were directed to results that included a video explaining the Chinese phrase for “tooting your own horn.”
Context: Content platforms in China are required to censor sensitive text and images in order to escape government censure. Failure to abide by content-related laws can result in a company having to suspend its services or pay fines, or end up having its business license revoked.
Artificial intelligence (AI) unicorn Sensetime is setting up a research center in the United Arab Emirates, with plans to hire hundreds of employees that will focus on AI in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa (EMEA).
Why it matters: While Sensetime has a significant presence in Asia, the Abu Dhabi-based research and development (R&D) center will mark the company’s first presence in the EMEA region.
“Abu Dhabi offers us the ability to focus on innovation in key sectors, opens up a new customer base and importantly, a new talent pool.”
—Xu Li, Sensetime co-founder and CEO in a statement
Details: The research center will develop AI for industries including healthcare, remote sensing, and education, according to Sensetime. The company aims to provide support to regional industries and governments using AI.
Context: Beijing-based Sensetime is one of the most valuable AI startups in the world, and already has offices in China, Hong Kong, Singapore, and Japan.
The Chinese government is expanding its social credit blacklists to online platforms and their users, aiming to punish “untrustworthy conduct” on the internet, according to draft regulations published this week by the country’s internet regulator.
Why it matters: The draft not only focuses on platforms but also individuals, potentially enabling the government to more effectively crack down on online conduct and impose restrictions on an individual’s internet activity.
“It generally follows the pattern of other blacklists by enforcing laws rather than creating new obligations, but subject area is broader and involves more individual conduct than others mainly concerned with corporate conduct.”
—Jeremy Daum, senior fellow at the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School, who has translated many of China’s social credit documents, wrote on Twitter
Details: The draft regulation was published by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) on Monday and is open for public comment until August 21.
Context: In 2014, China laid out a broad plan to develop a social credit system in order to promote a “sincerity culture.”
Surveillance camera manufacturer Hikvision dramatically increased its stockpile of components in the first half of the year, the South China Morning Post reports, drawing attention to the uncertainty the Hangzhou-based company faces amid increased US government scrutiny.
Why it matters: The Trump administration has reportedly been considering putting Hikvision on a trade blacklist, barring it from doing business with American companies.
“The [increased] inventory is a safe approach, as there’s no sanction today but it may drop in all of sudden tomorrow.”
—Huang Fanghong, Hikvision board secretary, to investors on Saturday
Details: Hikvision has nearly doubled its inventory of components and increased its holding of finished goods by a third over the past six months.
Context: Earlier this year, Huawei was placed on the Entity List by the US commerce department, preventing it from doing business with American firms. The US government has been looking at expanding the ban to Chinese surveillance equipment manufacturers.
Venture capitalist and Facebook board member Peter Thiel was right to draw attention to Google’s dealings in China, former White House cybersecurity chief Richard Clarke said in an interview earlier this week.
Why it matters: Representatives from Silicon Valley and the US government have weighed in on the search giant’s work in China, with US President Donald Trump renewing his offensive against the company this week.
“Google refused to work for the Pentagon on artificial intelligence [AI]. If you turn around and you work on AI in China, and you don’t really know what they’re going to do with that, I think there’s an issue.”
—Richard Clarke, Obama-era White House cybersecurity chief told CNBC
Details: Clarke implied that Google’s work in China made it complicit in serving the interests of the country’s government. His comments came after Thiel renewed an ongoing debate about Google’s links to China, calling them “treasonous” and requesting that the FBI and CIA investigate the company.
Context: A major point of contention is Google’s AI research lab in Beijing. Critics have contrasted its presence in China with its reluctance to engage in AI research for the US government.
Google has abandoned its plans to launch a censored search engine in China, according to testimony by a company executive before a US Senate committee on Tuesday.
Why it matters: The tech giant has faced continued criticism from lawmakers, the public, and its employees for its work on Project Dragonfly—the initiative to develop a search product for China.
“Yes, we have terminated [Project Dragonfly].” —Karan Bhatia, Google vice president of public policy, at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
Details: In response to questions by lawmakers, Bhatia said that the company has no current plans to enter the Chinese search market.
Context: Project Dragonfly was effectively ended last year. Google developers lost access to data from Beijing-based website 265.com, which the company was using to learn about Chinese search habits and develop content blacklists to comply with the country’s regulations.
William Li, serial entrepreneur and founder of oft-touted Tesla-killer Nio, lost more than $1 billion in net worth this year. His company, the five-year-old poster child of China’s troubled electric vehicle (EV) industry, hasn’t gotten off so lightly.
Nio went public in the US to much fanfare last year. Hubris over the company’s future dominated the second half of 2018. It’s no surprise: Nio began pre-orders for its second SUV, the ES6, in December. It also delivered a record number of its flagship vehicle, the ES8, in the last quarter of the year.
But the honeymoon phase ended as quickly as it began. The company’s share price plummeted more than 75% between March and June of this year. The decline resulted from flagging sales, a slew of investor lawsuits, and a spate of battery defects.
At the heart of Nio’s story lies a narrative that is all too familiar in China. The government backs an industry that runs wild—and then promptly pulls back the reins. Hundreds of registered EV companies now face uncertainty as regulators attempt to control the tumult they had a hand in creating.
Bottom line: China’s EV industry is in trouble. A sudden boom as a result of the government-led drive to support the industry led to a startup explosion, in which new companies piled into the field to take advantage of preferential treatment, creating a regulatory bubble.
General overcapacity in the country’s stalling automotive sector and quality issues have led to the government slamming the brakes. Of the nearly 500 companies focusing on EVs, industry experts predict that just 10% will survive.
The government won’t allow the market to fail, but an industry cull is coming, in which a few well-established players and state-owned automakers come out on top.
Rush to catch up: China was late in producing gas-driven cars, which put the country behind the US, Japan, and Germany. But the government now hopes that EVs can bridge the gap, catapulting China to the top spot in the global automotive supply chain. China created incentives for automakers to produce electric vehicles, with little thought to demand.
These measures led to a fertile environment for a bubble. As the government put its might behind the industry, investors threw their money behind startups, causing the industry to blow up. During these types of booms, scammers inevitably wind up founding companies that collect investments or subsidies without ever making a serious effort to develop a product.
Pulling subsidies: But things are changing—and fast. The Chinese government now believes that subsidies are doing more harm than good. Authorities say the allowances are stifling innovation, with companies relying on them to sell their vehicles rather than improving their technology. Since June, the government has made significant cuts, and there are plans to phase them out completely.
Cutting flab: The overall Chinese auto industry has an overcapacity problem. The country’s ability to make vehicles is far greater than demand for new cars, leaving production lines empty. Sales of vehicles fell by more than 10% during the first half of the year. The country reported its first annual decline in more than two decades last year.
Meanwhile, EV sales in the first quarter of 2019 more than doubled to reach nearly 225,000 vehicles, though this can’t necessarily be taken as a sign of the industry’s health.
The government is now taking measures to reduce capacity in the entire auto industry, but the move creates serious challenges for smaller EV makers. Restrictions have been placed on building new production plants. These facilities make it easier for an automaker to optimize costs, which is especially important during a market downturn. In order to set up a factory, a company must:
Nio was blocked by the National Development and Reform Commission from building a production plant in Shanghai’s Jiading district after US EV maker Tesla broke ground on a factory in the same city at the beginning of the year. Nio’s backtracking led investors to file multiple class-action lawsuits following claims that they had been misled.
At the same time, the government is promoting a “joint manufacturing” model, in which new EV makers such as Nio and rival Xpeng, among others, partner with large, mostly state-owned automakers to produce their vehicles. Nio partnered with JAC to build its cars in Hefei, a city in eastern China. Xpeng’s vehicles are made by Haima in central China. But this model comes with its own set of issues.
Quality issues: As with most industries that have grown on the back of heavy state support, the EV industry initially went underregulated. This has resulted in serious quality issues, and, in some cases, significant safety problems.
The government is now taking action. Last month, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology ordered automakers to conduct safety checks on all of their EVs, including those already sold. The ministry said that companies will be punished for hiding quality issues. The directive also requires companies to establish 24-hour emergency hotlines to deal with safety incidents.
The fallout: The EV industry is the latest victim of China’s tendency to promote and then regulate. Similar currents have been felt in other industries, most recently the peer-to-peer (P2P) lending sector.
The trajectory is often the same: The state relaxes regulation and encourages innovation, the market booms but puts consumers at risk, and then the state swoops in with tight regulations, driving smaller companies out and creating a downturn that only a few very large players can weather.
In the P2P lending industry, experts predict that up to 70% of firms may close this year. The situation is even more dire for the EV industry, which requires huge amounts of capital to keep it going.
The future: It’s clear that the government had not planned the current trajectory, though this scenario has appeared again and again across industries in China. For the EV market, consolidation is coming, with well-established automakers benefiting from manufacturing partnerships and technology gained through acquisitions.
Troubled Nio will most likely succeed, but only because the Chinese government won’t allow one of the darlings of its EV market to fail. It’s already made this abundantly clear—the company announced a RMB 10 billion bailout from a Beijing-based state-owned investment firm in May. The news came as Nio reported a 50% sequential drop in revenue and a significant slowdown in deliveries. It’s unlikely that the vast majority of companies in the industry will receive the same generous treatment.
]]>Research published this week has brought to light the novel methods Tencent uses to censor and limit the proliferation of “sensitive” images in realtime on popular messaging app WeChat. The report claims that users are unknowingly contributing to a database of blacklisted images.
Why it matters: Chinese companies are required to police content on their platforms to avoid government censure. The methods these firms use to filter content are largely complex and clandestine.
“Tencent implements realtime, automatic censorship of chat images on WeChat based on text contained in images and on an image’s visual similarity to those on a blacklist.”
—Citizen Lab researchers Xiaong Ruohan and Jeffrey Knockel
A Tencent spokesperson refused to comment when reached by TechNode on Wednesday.
Details: The report, published by University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab, claims that users who send images on the app help to populate a blacklist of sensitive photos that are categorized and given a unique “hash” fingerprint.
Context: Regulator-imposed cleanup campaigns of the Chinese internet have become more frequent and far-reaching in recent years. Companies that do not comply are held liable through suspensions of their operations and fines.
US President Donald Trump has renewed his offensive against search giant Google, saying his administration would investigate the company’s alleged links to the Chinese government.
Why it matters: Google’s work in China has come under greater scrutiny since news broke last year that the company was working on a censored version of its search engine for China.
“The Trump Administration will take a look!” —US President Donald Trump on Twitter
“As we have said before, we do not work with the Chinese military,” a Google spokesperson told TechNode in an emailed statement.
Details: Trump’s remarks come after Facebook board member and Trump supporter Peter Thiel said Google has “seemingly treasonous” links to China, giving no evidence.
Context: Since Google’s work on a filtered search engine was made public by The Intercept last year, the company has faced outcry from US officials, the public, and its employees.
This article has been updated to include a response from Google.
]]>Autonomous driving startup AutoX and Swedish electric vehicle maker NEVS are working together to deploy robotaxis in Europe by the end of 2020, according to a joint statement.
Why it matters: Chinese self-driving companies are taking an international approach to develop their technologies. In June, AutoX and rival Pony.ai were given the green light to run robotaxi services in California.
“AutoX enables companies like NEVS to become autonomous by creating an AI driver which is tailored to the specific geolocation it is in; adopting local driving styles, while also navigating in urban and dynamic conditions.”
— Xiao Jianxiong, CEO of AutoX
Details: NEVS is currently developing the robotaxi vehicle in Trollhättan, Sweden, and is taking design cues from a concept vehicle it teased at CES Asia in 2017.
Context: Following the partnership, AutoX will be testing its technology on three continents. In June, the company received permission to test its vehicles in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou.
Ride-hailing platform Didi will allow users to book rides operated by other companies within its app, the company said in a statement on Monday. The move follows Meituan’s recent foray into ride aggregation services.
Why it matters: The new service includes cars from platforms operated by state-backed automakers FAW, GAC, and Dongfeng Motors. Didi says that it currently has around 550 million users in the country.
Details: Didi will help auto manufacturers through its artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities and operational experience to build their capacity operating connected vehicles, the company said in its statement.
Context: In May, lifestyle services company Meituan, which runs its own ride-hailing platform, opened its app up to companies including Shouqi Limousine & Chauffeur, Caocao Chuxing, and Shenzhou. Didi was not included in the service.
Search engine Baidu has apologized to the Chinese public after it posted a fake message on its news aggregator in which the writer claimed to be the father of a missing nine-year-old girl whose body was found over the weekend.
Why it matters: Baidu has faced public backlash over trust issues, initially stemming from the company presenting paid ads for health services as search results.
“No words can express our guilt. We would like to apologize to Zixin’s relatives and to netizens.”
—Baidu statement
Details: Shortly after Zhejiang police confirmed that Zhang Zixin’s body had been found, an unauthorized message about the incident appeared on her father Zhang Jun’s verified Baidu News account.
Context: Baidu has long been criticized for the content across its various platforms. In 2016, a university student died of cancer following ineffective treatments from a hospital he had found through prominently placed ads in Baidu search results.
US-based electric vehicle (EV) maker Tesla is looking to Apple to help build its case against a former employee it suspects stole self-driving technology before defecting to a Chinese rival, according to court documents.
Why it matters: Cao Guangzhi, a former self-driving engineer at Tesla, confirmed in a filing earlier this week that he had uploaded Tesla’s Autopilot source code to his personal iCloud account, which is run by Apple, before leaving the company.
Xpeng was not immediately available for comment when reached by TechNode on Friday.
Details: Tesla filed the case against its former engineer in March, accusing him of uploading in excess of 300,000 files as well as source code to his personal cloud storage account before quitting in January.
Context: The US Justice Department last year brought charges against a former Apple employee who it suspects stole technology from the US tech giant before joining XMotors. Zhang Xiaolang, the defendant in the case, pleaded not guilty in July last year.
One of China’s largest online recruitment platforms Zhaopin leaked 160,000 resumes in an alleged theft by two former employees, the company said in a statement on microblogging platform Weibo earlier this week.
Why it matters: Despite government attempts to prevent data breaches, the illicit sale of personal data remains a persistent problem. The data also comes cheap. The leaked resumes were available online for as little as RMB 5 (around $0.70) each.
“User data is the lifeline of Zhaopin’s development. [The company] will not tolerate illegal activities including information fraud and violations of personal data.”
—Zhaopin statement
Details: The two employees, surnamed Lu and Wang, allegedly helped a third suspect get a corporate account for the platform in order for them to obtain the resumes.
Context: Personal data leaks are a common occurrence in China and Zhaopin’s compromised resumes form a tiny portion of the huge market for stolen data.
A trove of personal data from residents in eastern China’s Jiangsu Province was found on an unsecured server by security researchers, reports Bleeping Computer, the latest in a series of major security lapses in the country.
Why it matters: The server, which has subsequently been taken offline, included two databases. One contained nearly 60 million personal records such as ID numbers, locations, names, genders, and birthdates, among others. It was owned by provincial police and was not password protected.
Details: Sanyam Jain, researcher at cybersecurity non-profit GDI Foundation, found the open server on July 1 and reported it to the police and China’s National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team (CNCERT), a cybersecurity center affiliated with the government. By July 8 it was no longer accessible.
Context: Earlier this year, CNCERT said that it had found nearly 500 open databases online and that it was working with authorities to secure them. Jian’s disclosure is the latest in a slew that draws attention to significant cybersecurity lapses in China.
Artificial intelligence (AI) can ease the strain on China’s overburdened healthcare industry while increasing access to higher quality health services, said Ericson Chan, CEO of Pingan Technology.
Why it matters: Just 8% of China’s hospitals have received a triple-A grade, a classification that is reserved the specialized healthcare facilities. According to Chan, these hospitals service 50% of all patients in the country.
“You need to wait for more than three hours before you can see a doctor, and the consultations are no more than seven or eight minutes.” —Ericson Chan, CEO of Pingan Technology, told CNBC.
Details: AI could help to alleviate some of these problems, as well as the issue of overworked doctors. China currently employs around two physicians per 1,000 patients. Nonetheless, in order for the technology to be effective, startups and tech companies need to understand the bottlenecks that businesses encounter, Chan said.
Context: Pingan’s focus is applying AI in various industries including healthcare, finance, and smart cities. The company said it has developed a system that can predict how likely a patient is to suffer from a chronic illness before symptoms develop.
China’s Venture Capital Boom Shows Signs of Turning Into a Bust – Bloomberg
What happened: The value of venture deals in China plummeted by more than 75% in the second quarter as investors show increased concern over unpredictable trade talks and sky-high startup valuations. Investment fell to $9.4 billion this year from $41 billion in the first quarter of 2018. The number of deals has halved to just under 700.
Why it’s important: The rise of China’s tech sector has put it in the crosshairs of the Trump administration, making investors nervous. In May, the US blacklisted Huawei from sourcing US-made components. A similar ban may be imposed upon several other companies, including Chinese artificial intelligence startups. High profile IPOs have also played a role in declining venture capital investment. Both Xiaomi and lifestyle services giant Meituan-Dianping saw their stocks slide after listing, leading many to believe that private-market valuations had got out of control. Some investors are becoming more selective, moving away from cash-burning companies that make up the rental economy and opting for those that are less capital intensive, including enterprise software providers.
]]>Toyota to supply hydrogen fuel-cell tech to China’s FAW, Higer Bus – Reuters
What happened: Automakers FAW and Higer Bus will use Toyota’s hydrogen fuel cell technology, with Shanghai-based Re-Fire Technology acting as a local supplier. Re-Fire will serve as the systems integrator and develop fuel-cell powertrain tech that the automakers can use in their buses. FAW already has a joint venture with Toyota, as well as Mazda and Volkswagen.
Why it’s important: China is the largest electric vehicle market in the world. Japanese automakers are looking to the country to promote hydrogen-powered vehicles, believing them to be far superior. China is one of the biggest producers of carbon dioxide in the world. Toyota is betting its partnership with the Chinese manufacturers will help to push adoption in the country, as the only byproduct of hydrogen vehicles is water. South Korea’s Hyundai and Germany’s Daimler have also been attempting to promote the technology, but have been largely unsuccessful because of the price of these vehicles and lack of refueling infrastructure.
]]>Didi Forms Electric Vehicle Joint Venture With Hainan State Firms – Caixin Global
What happened: Ride-hailing giant Didi and two state-owned firms have set up an electric vehicle services joint venture (JV) in the southern island province of Hainan. The new company, which also includes a subsidiary of China Southern Power Grid (CSPG) and an investment branch of the Hainan government as partners, will lease and sell electric vehicles (EV), and manage charging infrastructure.
Why it’s important: Hainan hopes to become a trailblazer in EV sales and production, even going as far as planning a province-wide ban on fossil fuel-driven vehicles by 2030. Meanwhile, Didi has been forging partnerships to give its drivers access to more charging facilities. CSPG has invested more than RMB 3 billion (around $436 million) to set up 23,000 charging outlets in the region. Another 12,000 are expected to go online by the end of 2019. China leads the world in terms of access to EV charging facilities, according to consultancy firm Alix Partners. The country was home to seven vehicles per charger in 2018, compared with the nearly 20 cars for every pile in the US.
]]>Baidu and a coalition from the automotive industry have released a set of guiding principles for autonomous vehicles (AV), promoting a system of “safety by design” as conversations about self-driving cars go mainstream.
The coalition includes Daimler, BMW, Intel, Volkswagen, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Audi, and automotive supplier Continental, among others.
“In addition to offering broader access to mobility, [automated driving] can also help to reduce the number of driving-related accidents and crashes. When doing so, the safety of automated driving vehicles is one of the most important factors,” the group said, explaining the motivation behind the principles.
AV proponents have pointed out that the vehicles could end up being safer than human-driven cars. However, the coalition highlights a number of topics that need to be resolved in order to meet this goal.
The nearly 150-page document covers 12 areas including cybersecurity protection, driver-vehicle handovers, data recording, coping with component failures, and awareness of an autonomous system’s limitations. According to the group, balancing safety and availability in Level 3 and Level 4 autonomous vehicles, those that require human interventions in certain scenarios, is difficult to balance.
AV safety will peak when operations are optimized but restricted to certain driving scenarios, the group says. However, if restrictions are too high, safety goals cannot be reached due to limited availability. The same is true when limitations are too liberal.
“Being too risk-averse leads to a system that is overly conservative, and the system availability becomes too low, which in turn will not provide the benefits of a safer and more comfortable customer experience,” the report said.
The principles also highlight the importance of cybersecurity. A slew of possible safety risks arise from malicious actors seeking to take advantage of the connected vehicles, which could possibly allow them to gain access to a car’s controls.
In June, cybersecurity firm Regulus Cyber was able to spoof a Tesla’s GPS system to redirect it off a highway. However, the researchers had to put an antenna on the vehicle in order to launch the attack.
Similarly, in April, Tencent’s Keen Security Lab was able to trick a Tesla into switching lanes. The researches put stickers on the road to fool the vehicle into altering its behavior. Though the attack didn’t require any hacking, it highlights how AVs could be manipulated if safety issues are not thoroughly assessed and resolved.
The principles draw attention to a reliance on data, whether gathered by sensors or provided by maps and GPS, in order for AVs to function properly. “If the integrity or authenticity of this data is compromised, the building blocks of the automated driving functions will use faulty data to maneuver the vehicle, which might result in inaccurate driving or other deviations from correct operation,” it said.
]]>Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund appoints SenseTime founder to board as it seeks to expand tech investments – South China Morning Post
What happened: Khazanah Nasional, Malaysia’s sovereign wealth fund, has appointed the founder of artificial intelligence (AI) startup Sensetime as a board member to advise on tech investments. Tang Xiao’ou will advise on AI-related matters, marking the first time a foreign national has been appointed to such a position. Meanwhile, Lau Seng Yee, a Malaysian citizen and executive at Tencent, has also been appointed.
Why it’s important: Malaysia has shown increasing interest in Chinese technology, and Sensetime serves as a poster child of China’s tech development. Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has previously visited the AI firm’s Beijing headquarters, and taken tours of both Alibaba’s and automaker Geely’s campuses during visits to China. Notably, the 93-year-old leader showed his support for telecommunications giant Huawei, saying that Malaysia would use its equipment “as much as possible” despite the Chinese company finding itself at the center of international scrutiny.
]]>Electric vehicle (EV) maker Nio has lost two members of its management team just days after announcing a recall of more than a quarter of its vehicles in China.
Angelika Sodian, managing director of the company’s business in the United Kingdom, said on LinkedIn over the weekend that she is leaving Nio. Sodian had been with the company for more than four years, with positions in China, Germany, and the UK. Prior to her role as managing director, Sodian was Nio’s human resources director for Europe.
“I have thought about this decision for a long while, but there are certain moments in life when you feel it is time for new priorities, ” she said.
Meanwhile, Zhuang Li, head of Nio’s software team, is leaving the EV company to found a vehicle software company, 36kr reported. Nio’s software teams in Beijing and Shanghai were split prior to Zhuang’s departure, and founder Li Bin will now oversee the business.
Zhuang joined Nio in July 2016 as vice president of software research and development, taking charge of vehicle software design, including digital cockpits and networking services.
Zhuang co-founded internet of vehicle solutions company Meijia Technology, Chinese media previously reported. Public records show that the company was registered in Hong Kong in August 2018. Digital cockpit systems, onboard networking controllers, and voice-enabled in-car operating systems are among its main businesses.
Both Zhuang and Sodian left for personal reasons, a Nio spokesperson told TechNode on Monday.
Their departures come just days after Nio announced a massive recall of nearly 5,000 vehicles as a result of a battery fault that could result in fires. The recall followed three incidents in which Nio vehicles spontaneously combusted, as well as a government order urging Chinese EV makers to conduct checks for potential safety hazards and take necessary precautions, including recalls, to prevent any further incidents.
Nio has faced mounting pressure on its business since the beginning of the year. Apart from a slowdown in the Chinese auto market and economy, the company has fallen victim to government measures to battle overcapacity in China’s bloated automotive sector.
Nio’s share price has fallen by more than 75% since March when it announced that it was abandoning plans to build a production plant in Shanghai’s Jiading District. The move followed a directive from the National Development and Reform Commission, China’s top planning agency. The company will now have to wait until US rival Tesla has reached capacity at its plant in Shanghai, which is expected to be completed later this year, before building its own factory in the city.
The company has reported a steady decline in sales. In the first quarter, deliveries dropped to around 4,000 vehicles, down by 50% compared with the fourth quarter of 2018. Nio has suffered from decreasing government subsidies, a macroeconomic slowdown, and the US-China trade war, CFO Louis Hsieh said during an earnings call in May.
Additional reporting by Jill Shen.
]]>Electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Nio on Thursday issued a recall of more than a quarter of all vehicles sold, saying that it has found a battery flaw that could result in potential safety hazards.
The move follows several incidents in which the company’s cars have self-ignited, as well as a government order calling for EV makers to minimize the risks of battery fires.
Nio said in a statement on microblogging platform Weibo that the recall will affect more than 4,800 of its flagship ES8 SUVs sold between April and October 2018. As of the end of May the company had delivered around 17,500 vehicles. Nio said that in extreme cases the flaw could result in a battery short circuit and that it would issue new batteries for any affected vehicles.
The recall follows three separate incidents in recent months in which ES8s have caught fire. In April, a Nio vehicle ignited while parked at a service center in central China. A month later an ES8 caught fire while parked at the company’s headquarters in Shanghai. A third fire broke out in June in the central Chinese city of Wuhan.
Nio said it had found the flaw following an investigation into the recent incidents. An initial inquiry found that one of the fires had been caused by a short circuit, which the company said occurred as a result of chassis damage. Meanwhile, two of US EV maker Tesla’s vehicles self-combusted in China during the same period. Tesla has not released the results of its investigation.
“We apologize to users and the public for the troubles caused by recent battery safety incidents,” Nio said in its recent statement on Weibo.
Earlier this month, China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology issued an order urging EV makers to investigate the fires and take all necessary precautions to prevent further incidents. The government body said that it would require recalls if any quality issues were found, and checks should include vehicles that had already been sold. The ministry promised to punish companies that intentionally hide problems.
]]>In October, a fight erupted between a passenger and the driver of a Chongqing bus. In the hubbub, the vehicle swerved across the road and through the barrier of a bridge, falling into the Yangtze River. All 15 people on board perished.
The incident sparked widespread indignation across the country as observers largely blamed the passenger for provoking the fight. It also brought to light some 20 other attacks on bus drivers that occurred in China that year, although none with so high a casualty count.
Against the backdrop of the public outcry, officials took action. “[The] government regulations’ requirements are higher now,” Liang Kun, product manager at Xiamen-based surveillance and security firm Reconova, told TechNode. Passenger aggression towards drivers can now be punished by law, and the installation of “active safety” technology is required on commercial vehicles in addition to public transportation. Some of the new measures could prevent tragedies like the one that happened in Chongqing, Liang believes.
Along with the heightening of regulations surrounding road safety, Reconova has seen more demand for its driver surveillance services, which include facial recognition devices that detect distracted driving as well as machine vision technology that surveys and warns of nearby vehicles and pedestrians.
The six-year-old startup, which completed a Series B last May led by Intel Capital, is part of a larger trend towards machine-assisted driving. As applications for fully-autonomous vehicle technology–for consumers, at least–proceed relatively slowly, this particular sector is accelerating, with a growing number of players, including artificial intelligence (AI) giants Sensetime and Baidu, entering the market. As a result, increased surveillance of drivers could significantly reduce the likelihood of accidents; however, it also raises certain security risks as well as potential concerns over privacy.
On a sunny afternoon in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, TechNode joined Liang for a spin in a Reconova test vehicle. Inside five cameras were plastered in a straight line down the van’s windshield, each one able to detect movements by nearby vehicles. Another device above and to the left of the steering wheel was pointed directly at the driver’s face, checking for signs of drowsiness, phone use, or smoking.
At periodic points during the drive, Liang demonstrated how the system reacts to various risky behaviors. Twice, after checking that the road is clear, he closed his eyes for a few nerve-wracking seconds before the system’s speaker barked a reprimand: “Danger, please be careful.”
Holding a phone to the side of one’s face while the van is moving elicits a similar warning, as do too-quick turns and neighboring vehicles that switch lanes without leaving enough space. In the relatively calm mid-afternoon traffic, though, the system is mostly quiet, only occasionally blaring out brief cautions.
According to Liang, camera footage of driver misdemeanors and other safety risks can be automatically uploaded to a company’s platform if the system is online.
“In accordance with Chinese law, the equipment doesn’t collect the personal information of the driver or the person being surveilled,” Liang said in reference to Reconova’s facial recognition technology, which can also verify drivers’ identities.
“We don’t know who is who,” he added. According to him, the system doesn’t cross-check images with ID information, but only checks whether someone’s facial characteristics match companies’ driver records.
This year, a major Chinese logistics company secured Reconova’s services for a part of their delivery fleet. “Our first batch has already been installed and their testing program was excellent,” Liang told TechNode. “If it really is effective,” the client has plans to expand, he said.
The company has also had “successful use cases” in the area of public transportation. Bus company clients, for instance, can install a one-click panic button on their vehicles, allowing drivers to contact police more easily in case of an emergency. Another, optional feature allows buses to be brought to a halt via remote control.
Reconova sales director Morgan Guo told TechNode in an interview that this field has grown rapidly in the last year: from 4,000 orders in 2017, demand soared to 30,000 devices installed the next year. In 2019, Guo predicts, that number could grow another “70-80%.”
In addition to general public safety, increased scrutiny of truck and bus drivers is also good news for companies like Reconova, transportation firms, and insurers. The reaction of the drivers themselves, however, has been mixed.
“Drivers will use things to block this device, or bend the device around so that it’s not effective,” Liang told TechNode while gesturing to the facial recognition gadget to his left. Because employees feel that “there’s something monitoring their behavior,” Liang says, “there will be aversion.”
Hiko Lee, enterprise solution manager of GreenSafety, a startup that supplies similar driver surveillance systems to business clients in Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan, has heard of similar resistance from drivers.
For clients such as electricity supplier China Light and Power Company (CLP), GreenSafety assigned drivers in 50 vehicles grades based on their behavior.
“When the score is high, around 100 marks, then the performance is good” while 50-60 might be the mark of a “bad driver,” Lee told TechNode. Thanks to improvement in driver ratings over time, GreenSafety won the chance to trial their devices for two major bus companies in Hong Kong. Currently, its systems operate on around 400 vehicles in the city.
“Of course at first they really don’t appreciate it,” said Lee of CLP’s drivers. After three to six months of education, however, attitudes slowly changed.
“The Hong Kong bus and taxi drivers may work over 10 hours per day. So we will teach them by training, by lessons, by different methods–maybe talk to the management and help the management to persuade them,” Lee said.
He compares the situation to the widespread adoption of GPS tracking and basic in-vehicle cameras over the last decade. Drivers gradually accepted the initially intrusive technology because “they know that this kind of system can protect them” from liability in accidents.
Five months before the Chongqing bus fell into the Yangtze River, killing 15, another case of driver-passenger violence attracted national attention. In May 2018, a woman using online ride-hailing platform Didi to hitch a ride was murdered by her male driver. Just a few months later, in August, another female passenger using the same service was raped and murdered by the man behind the wheel.
The incidents sparked a nationwide backlash against Didi, and provoked official scrutiny—leading the platform to adopt a series of new safety measures, from an emergency number linkup for passengers to optional video or audio recording of rides.
Asked whether high-tech AI features might soon enter ride-hailing companies’ arsenals, both Liang and Lee said the industry showed potential.
Companies in the field are currently in talks with Reconova over facial recognition solutions to verify drivers’ identities, according to Liang. In both of last year’s high-profile Didi murders, the culprits posed as registered drivers on the app. “This need exists,” said Liang.
Tal Krzypow, vice president of product management at Israeli computer vision firm Eyesight, says China’s ride-hailing market is just as interested in driver surveillance as “any other fleet.”
Eyesight is currently working with original equipment manufacturers and aftermarket partners to provide driving monitoring system solutions to China. “There is a willingness to adopt new technology and going to market quickly is very impressive” in the country, Kryzpow told TechNode.
Using advanced and often expensive technology such as machine learning to analyze video footage, however, may not be on the table for those companies as of yet. Lee pointed out that ride-hailing startups may not be inclined to invest so much in individual cars and drivers. However, with pressure from government as well as popular sentiment, that could change, Liang said.
Lee also foresees a larger shift to the consumer market as driver surveillance technology continues to advance. Once more affordable, accessible devices are released on the market, “maybe the customer can just buy it from the Internet and they can install it themselves very easily.”
In a written statement compiled for TechNode, analysts from international firm BIS Research predicted rapid growth of connected and partially autonomous vehicles in China over the next two years. As a reference, they cited the Chinese government’s prediction that the domestic market for connected auto will grow to $14 billion by 2020.
However, the increasing amount of data will also require cybersecurity upgrades. “Vehicles need protection from threats such as malicious software, unauthorized access, attack on vehicle CAN [controller area network] BUS and ECUs [electronic control units], sniffing of vehicle data, loss of cloud data, and malicious codes in the vehicle, among others,” BIS analysts wrote.
Speaking of another sector of Reconova’s, smart security and surveillance systems for corporate and official clients, Morgan Guo said that “privacy will be protected.” According to Guo, the company itself doesn’t permanently store visual or other information gathered by its software, although he admitted that China’s government is by law allowed to do so.
Currently, more than 200 electric vehicle manufacturers, including Tesla, BMW, Volkswagen, and Nio have been called upon to transmit their vehicles’ location data to government-backed monitoring facilities.
That raises the question of where the data gathered by systems like Reconova’s and GreenSafety’s will be stored, and who will have access to such valuable information. Generally, how the technology is implemented is left up to buyers.
“We do provide guidelines,” said EyeSight’s Krzypow.
As Berkeley professor Alexandre M. Bayen, who directs the university’s Institute of Transportation Studies, told TechNode, however, individual drivers’ data privacy could already be compromised. According to Bayen, the issue “in a sense started 10 years ago.”
He referred to the advent of smartphones, as well as the data-gathering that accompanies their use: “Your phone activity while you’re driving, potentially the onboard car activity if your car is somehow hooked up with your phone to Bluetooth or any other link.” “All that data, it’s already there, it’s already available,” and being accessed by large tech corporations like Google, Bayen added.
“With more data, of course, the problem grows,” Bayen said. But he believes that the ultimate responsibility of protecting that information falls on the government. “To me, the technology is just a means to reveal the data; the real question is the question of policy,” Bayen said.
With additional reporting by Chris Udemans.
]]>Electric vehicle manufacturer Nio has reported a 50% sequential drop in quarterly revenue as its deliveries during the first three months of 2019 fell sharply.
Revenues reached RMB 1.6 billion (around $231 million) in the first quarter, down from RMB 3.4 billion at the end of last year. Deliveries of the company’s flagship ES8 SUV dropped by half to around 4,000 vehicles compared with the fourth quarter of 2018.
Meanwhile, Nio’s net loss narrowed by 25%, falling from RMB 3.5 billion to RMB 2.6 billion. Still, the company expects second-quarter revenue to decrease by as much as 30% compared the first three months of the year.
Nio also announced that it had formed a joint venture with state-owned investment firm Beijing E-Town International Investment and Development Co., which will invest up to RMB 10 billion in the new entity. E-Town is also expected to help Nio find partners to build a manufacturing plant for its next-generation vehicles. The company’s stock was up 5% in pre-market trading on Tuesday.
Nio has faced challenges from decreasing government subsidies, a macroeconomic slowdown, and the US-China trade war, Nio CFO Louis Hsieh said in an earnings call on Tuesday. Other factors include a seasonal slowdown around Chinese New Year, increased competition, and accelerated deliveries last year, the company said.
Despite beginning deliveries of its second production vehicle, the ES6, in June, Nio anticipates that it will sell just 3,200 vehicles in the second quarter.
“We expect an even more challenging sales environment and anticipate overall sequential demand and deliveries to decrease, as competition continues to accelerate and the general automobile market in China remains muted,” Hsieh said in a statement.
Nio announced earlier this year that it had abandoned plans to build a production plant in Shanghai’s Jiading District, opting instead for a “joint manufacturing” partnership with state-owned automaker JAC. The company has extended its cooperation with JAC to produce the ES6.
Apart from stalling deliveries, the company has faced several class action lawsuits, as shareholders claim the company misled them prior to going public on the New York Stock Exchange in September last year. Investors said that Nio had not disclosed the company would ditch its plans to build a factory and that it had overstated the number of vehicles the company would sell.
Nio is required to pay JAC for every vehicle produced, as well as any losses JAC incurs as a result of building Nio’s vehicles. As of the end of June last year, Nio had paid JAC RMB 65 million (around $10 million) for losses during the second quarter of 2018, according to the company’s IPO filing. The company made losses of $1.4 billion in 2018, despite revenues of $720 million.
]]>Tesla Gets Ready to Reveal Prices of Model 3 in China – Bloomberg
What happened: US electric vehicle (EV) maker Tesla is close to revealing the price of its Model 3 in China, with Bloomberg sources saying that vehicles could be priced between RMB 300,000 (around $43,400) and RMB 350,000 before subsidies. The final number is still being decided upon. The EV manufacturer plans to make an announcement on Friday, according to a post on microblogging platform Weibo, which invites people to guess the price of the domestically made model.
Why it’s important: Tesla already sells Model 3 vehicles in China, but they have to be shipped from the US, subjecting them to import tariffs and disqualifying them from government subsidies. Prices for the Model 3 currently start at RMB 377,000, including taxes and import duties. The company is currently building a factory in Shanghai, which it is counting on to increase sales in China. But competition could stand in Tesla’s way. The country is already home to nearly 500 registered EV companies, including Nio, Xpeng, Byton, and WM Motor. Telsa has also seen its share of controversy, with two of its vehicles catching fire in the Greater China area in the past two months.
]]>China’s Siri Plunges as Trump Casts Wider Net Over Tech Firms – Bloomberg
What happened: Shares of Shenzhen-listed voice recognition firm Iflytek plunged by nearly 10% after news broke that the US is considering curbs on the company, along with several other Chinese tech companies, following Washington’s Huawei offensive. Also facing scrutiny are artificial intelligence company Megvii, data firm Meiya, and security camera makers Hikvision and Dahua.
Why it’s important: The Trump administration is casting a wider net in targeting companies affiliated with China’s vast surveillance network. Iflytek says it controls more than 70% of China’s speech recognition market with its technology being used in everything from consumer devices to the country’s courtrooms. The offensive comes after the US last week put Huawei on a trade blacklist, which forms one of a list of measures to temper China’s influence on technology around the world. Trump is now targeting companies with involvement in China’s surveillance apparatus, a system that has caused concern across the globe.
]]>Increased focus should be placed on democratizing artificial intelligence (AI) so that the technology’s capabilities aren’t solely available to big corporations, according to a director at Microsoft Research Asia (MSRA).
Tim Pan, senior outreach director at MSRA, warned that the changes brought upon by AI could come too fast for the general public to react and realign themselves in the workplace. He said that widespread access to AI should be emphasized.
“It will be very difficult for a taxi driver to change his or her job to be a computer scientist in their lifetime,” said Pan. A lot of professional drivers will lose their jobs when autonomous vehicles hit the streets, he added, which creates a social issue.
China has set out ambitious goals for its AI development. The country is pushing to become a global leader in the technology by 2030, while increasing its focus on high-tech industries, including chipmaking, through its Made in China 2025 initiative.
Pan said governments should play an active role in mitigating these risks by, for instance, strengthening the younger generation’s computer science abilities.
Pan was speaking on a panel focused on AI ethics in China at TechNode’s Emerge conference in Shanghai on Thursday morning. He was joined by Nancy Xu, CEO and founder of Cevolution, Christopher Byrd, fellow at Oxford University’s Future of Humanity Institute, and Danny Wang, China new IT and AI managing director at Accenture.
According to research firm McKinsey, 51% of work-related activities in China could be automated, equal to nearly 400 million jobs.
But the arrival of automation does not necessarily spell doom for low-skilled workers. New forms of blue-collar work could include labeling data to train AIs.
Even so, strategies that work in other regions for upskilling workers in the AI era may not have the same effect in China. “The differences between the Chinese economy and western economies are very important,” said Byrd, explaining that access to cheaper labor may not provide the same incentives for automation.
Governments should support tech companies, which know the technology, to lead in AI ethics, Byrd said.
China has become increasingly engaged in conversations about AI ethics. At this year’s Two Sessions, the country’s largest annual gathering of lawmakers and political advisers, CEOs Robin Li of Baidu and Pony Ma of Tencent called for rules emphasizing ethical standards in AI development. Li urged the government to consult experts when developing ethical frameworks for emerging technologies, and for China to take part in a global dialog on AI ethics.
“China has some advantages because it has a unified agenda. You don’t have some of the complicated multi-level structures like in the US,” said Byrd on the sidelines of TechNode’s event.
Even so, out of almost 3,500 robotics and AI researchers who signed an open letter initiated by US think tank Future of Life Institute to ban autonomous weapons, only three were affiliated to a Chinese institution, and they were all from the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
]]>Self-driving truck startup TuSimple will haul mail for USPS in two-week pilot – TechCrunch
What happened: Autonomous truck startup TuSimple, which has operations in China and the US, has been awarded a contract to haul United States Postal Service trailers between Dallas and Phoenix, a trip that spans around 1,600 kilometers. The pilot will last two weeks, and each truck will be run for 22 hours, which includes overnight driving. A safety engineer will be present on all trips.
Why it’s important: TuSimple has been running daily routes for customers in Arizona and was last year permitted to test its trucks on selected roads in Shanghai. The company has partnered with Chinese automakers Shaanxi Automotive and Sinotruck and seeks to commercialize its technology by next year. The majority of the attention given to autonomous vehicles has focused on self-driving cars, but the logistics industry could see huge increases in efficiency as a result of autonomous trucking, which would be evident in the growing e-commerce market.
]]>Search giant Baidu is reportedly seeking to spin off its autonomous driving unit, a move that comes just days after the company reported its first quarterly net loss since listing in 2005.
The company is currently looking for external investors for the business amid increased financial pressures, Caijing reports, citing a person close to the company as saying.
A Baidu spokeswoman denied the claims when contacted by TechNode, saying that Apollo, the company’s self-driving platform, is an important part of Baidu’s artificial intelligence (AI) strategy.
The prospective spinoff comes after a tough first quarter for Baidu. The company reported a loss of nearly RMB 330 million (around $49 million) in the three-month period ended March 31. To compare, the company reported RMB 6.7 billion in net income during the same period a year earlier.
Driving these losses was a considerable increase in spending. The company’s total operating costs and expenses reached RMB 25 billion during the first quarter, up from around RMB 16 billion during the same period in 2018. Research and development costs increased by 26% year on year.
Baidu CEO Robin Li said in 2017 that the company would seek to spin off its self driving unit when it is mature enough and is in need of more funding. “When we think [a] business is promising enough and it has reached a stage that running it independently or introducing more strategic investors would make sense, we will do that,” Li said at the time.
Baidu has been named one of China’s AI champions and is tasked with spearheading the development of autonomous vehicles in the country. The company is testing its self-driving cars on the roads in China and the US. According to California’s Department of Motor Vehicles, Baidu’s AVs required human drivers to take over every 330 kilometers, compared with Chinese rival Pony.ai’s 1,600 kilometers per “disengagement.”
Meanwhile, the company’s vehicles made up more than 90% of all mileage traveled by self-driving cars in Beijing last year. The company has also started rolling out a fleet of robotaxis in Changsha, the capital of Hunan province in central China.
]]>Lifestyle services super app Meituan has expanded its aggregated ride-hailing services to an additional 15 cities around China, intensifying competition in the sector and taking direct aim at Didi.
The company initially launched the service, which allows users to access vehicles from several ride-hailing platforms within Meituan’s app, in Nanjing and Shanghai in late April. Users are given the choice of hailing rides using Shouqi Limousine & Chauffeur, Caocao Chuxing, and Shenzhou, as well as its own Meituan Dache. Market leader Didi has not been included in the service.
Meituan has now expanded the scope of the platform to an additional 15 cities, including the eastern cities of Suzhou, Hangzhou, and Ningbo, as well as Xi’an, Chengdu, Wuhan, and Shenzhen.
Meituan isn’t the first platform that allows users to book trips from multiple ride-hailing companies. The firm joins Chinese map apps Autonavi and Baidu Map in offering the service.
Meituan is taking a more cautious approach to improving its customer experience amid increased regulation of the ride-hailing sector and a 57% increase in its operating losses in the fourth quarter of 2018. Aggregating rides allows the company to offer additional functionality without a significant increase in costs.
Teaming up with the likes of Shouqi and Shenzhou also allows Meituan to take on Didi, which currently commands the ride-hailing market in China. Didi has seen increased scrutiny over the past year following two high profile murders of passengers by their drivers using the company’s carpooling service Hitch.
Since then, several smaller players have set up shop, hoping to take a share of the market. Most recently, electric vehicle (EV) maker Xpeng, also known as Xiaopeng, began operating a ride-hailing pilot in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou. Unlike other companies, the EV manufacturer will employ all of its drivers.
Several automakers are looking to offer similar services. In December Mercedes Benz and Volkswagen partnered on a high-end ride-hailing service in Shanghai, while Daimler and Geely set up a joint venture in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou last week, focusing on ride-hailing and car rental services. Tech giants Tencent and Alibaba also seek to gain a share of the market, setting up a RMB 10 billion (around $1.5 billion) mobility venture with state-owned automaker Changan in Nanjing.
]]>China Just Held a Car Race Without Any Drivers – Bloomberg
What happened: A team from Beijing’s Tsinghua University has won a driverless car race in eastern China, outperforming state-owned auto manufacturers FAW and Beijing Electric Vehicle Co. The event, which took place in Tianjin, consisted of an off-road challenge, an urban race, and a highway contest. The race included obstacles like fake cows and artificial fog on a circuit covering the area of 10 soccer fields.
Why it’s important: The competition is meant to act as a driving force to spur China’s efforts in autonomous driving development. Chinese companies, including WeRide, Pony.ai, and Baidu, are looking to take on international rivals like Waymo, and are testing vehicles at home and abroad. California’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) in February released data on autonomous vehicle tests that had taken place in the state, reporting the total number of “disengagements,” the frequency human drivers were required to take over. Pony.ai and Baidu logged 1,600 kilometers and 330 kilometers per disengagement, respectively. Meanwhile, Baidu’s AVs accounted for more than 90% of the total distance self-driving cars traveled in Beijing last year.
]]>Cities should regulate facial recognition instead of banning it, China’s AI champion SenseTime says – South China Morning Post
What happened: Xu Li, CEO and co-founder of Sensetime, the world’s most valuable artificial intelligence startup, says governments should craft regulations to govern facial recognition systems, and not impose an outright ban on their use. There should be guidelines that govern the circumstances for which emerging technologies can be used, the South China Morning Post cites Xu as saying. He believes that introducing new rules to control how the technology is implemented is crucial to its widespread adoption.
What happened: Lu’s comments come shortly after San Francisco became the first US city to ban the use of facial recognition technology by police and government agencies. The restriction excludes airports and federally regulated facilities. Oakland in California and Somerville in Massachusetts are contemplating similar bans. In China, facial recognition systems are being used for access control at the country’s borders, but also in classrooms and to punish jaywalkers. The country has made rapid advances in the technology as a result of its large population and huge trove of centralized data.
]]>Search and artificial intelligence (AI) giant Baidu has reported a quarterly net loss for the first time since listing in 2005, as the company grapples with China’s slowing economy and increased competition while spending on promotional activities skyrocketed.
Baidu lost nearly RMB 330 million (around $48 million) in the first three months of 2019. This compares to the company’s net income of RMB 6.7 billion during the first quarter of 2018. Baidu shares fell around 9% in aftermarket trading following the release of its results.
Baidu attributed its losses to increased spending on content, most notably iQiyi, as well as promotional activities in which Baidu gave away hongbao, or red packets, as part of an alliance with national broadcaster China Central Television over Chinese New Year.
The company also accelerated spending on traffic acquisition, while other costs of revenue, including depreciation and operational spending, expanded by 75% year over year, which Baidu said was “mainly due to higher depreciation expense and the growth in sales of first-party smart devices.”
In an internal memo to employees on Friday obtained by TechNode, Baidu CEO Robin Li acknowledged that the company is facing a “grim situation,” but said that 2019 holds great opportunities.
Meanwhile, Baidu said that Xiang Hailong, senior vice president of the company’s search business, resigned after joining in 2005. Shen Dou, previously head of Baidu’s mobile products, will take Xiang’s place.
Baidu is now putting increased focus on this area. Company CFO Herman Yu said during an earnings call on Friday morning that Baidu’s priority is to strengthen its mobile foundations, which includes growing its search and feed apps, and new AI businesses.
Baidu’s revenue reached RMB 24 billion, a year-on-year increase of 15%. The company saw its online marketing revenue grow by just 3% as it deals with competition from younger players like Bytedance, which operates competing video and news feed products. Baidu has attempted to keep up with its own short video apps including Haokan, which reached 22 million daily active users in March 2019. The company also said that users of its Baidu App grew by nearly 28% year on year.
Baidu expects challenges to its advertising business to continue. “Online marketing in the near term will face a more challenging environment,” Yu said on the earnings call. He attributed this to macro conditions, tighter government scrutiny of content, and investment cutbacks from the venture capital community.
To combat slowing advertising revenue, Baidu has been increasing its focus on cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and autonomous vehicles. The company has also started to recalibrate its business to focus more on enterprise customers. Amid concerns of slowing growth, Baidu this week shut down its education business unit and moved from consumer-facing education services to cloud-based business solutions.
Yu warned that Baidu’s pursuits in cloud computing, autonomous driving, among others, may result in the company sacrificing short term profits. He made similar comments in Baidu’s last earnings release, cautioning investors that Baidu’s diversification would require “heavy investments.”
]]>Chinese electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Xiaopeng on Thursday launched a ride-hailing service in southern China, as automakers look to the industry and market leader Didi accrues losses from its operations.
Xiaopeng, also known as Xpeng, launched the trial service, dubbed Pengster, in Guangzhou, where the company is headquartered. The move comes after the EV maker was granted a ride-hailing license by city authorities earlier this week.
Unlike Didi, Xiaopeng will employ all of the “trained, verified and monitored professional drivers” on its platform, the company said in a statement. Xiaopeng is rolling out the service with an initial “several hundred” of its G3 SUVs, though it plans to increase its fleet size to 2,000 by the end of 2019.
The service is currently only available in Guangzhou but may expand gradually to other cities over time, a Xiaopeng spokeswoman told TechNode.
“The Pengster service will allow Xpeng Motors to gain important operational experience from a diversified range of driving scenarios, [and] deeper understanding of customer behavior and preference,” the company said.
Xiaopeng is counting on raising brand awareness by having more of its vehicles on the road, which will effectively function as on-the-road showrooms. Operating a ride-hailing fleet also gives the company access to additional training data that could be used to further develop its autonomous driving system. In April, Xiaopeng delivered 2,200 vehicles in China.
“We are an EV designer and manufacturer,” the spokeswoman said. “We are doing this from a different point of view.”
Tu Le, founder of consultancy Sino Auto Insights, told TechNode that Xiaopeng needs to sell four to five times the number of vehicles the company did in April in order to justify its valuation and build enough working capital to keep the business going.
“They’re perhaps not seeing the demand for their vehicles that they originally forecast,” Le said. “This is another way to get vehicles built, on the road, and in use.”
China’s ride-hailing market has seen upheaval over the past year, as the industry has sought solutions for safety concerns after two passengers were murdered by their drivers last year while using Didi’s carpooling service Hitch. Several city governments have since imposed rules on platforms, requiring that vehicles and drivers register in the city in which they operate.
Nonetheless, these rules haven’t stopped newer entrants, which include automakers, from setting up operations around the country, even as Didi reports it costs more to operate some trips than the company makes in commission revenue.
In December Mercedes Benz and Volkswagen partnered on a high-end ride-hailing service in Shanghai. Meanwhile, Tencent, Alibaba, and automakers including state-owned Changan set up a RMB 10 billion (around $1.5 billion) ride-hailing venture in Nanjing. Like Xiaopeng’s mobility platform, the company’s focus is on electric cars.
Most recently, automakers Daimler and Geely set up a joint venture in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou to provide ride-hailing and car rental services.
But market leader Didi continues to make losses. The company last year reportedly lost nearly RMB 11 billion, almost five times higher than losses in 2017. In April, Didi reported that operating costs accounted for around 21% of total fare revenue from ride hailing in the fourth quarter of 2018, two percentage points higher than its commission rate from fares. Didi also said the company spent one-third of its commission revenue on driver subsidies during the same period.
]]>Tesla issues battery software update after Hong Kong vehicle fire – TechCrunch
What happened: American electric vehicle (EV) maker Tesla is issuing an over-the-air software update to change the battery charge settings in its Model S and Model X vehicles after one of its cars caught fire while parked in Hong Kong. Tesla said the update is being done out of “an abundance of caution,” though it will not be applied to the Model 3.
Why it’s important: Tesla has yet to identify the cause of the Model S fire in Hong Kong, which occurred just weeks after one of the company’s vehicles self-ignited while parked in a Shanghai parking garage. The incidents come as Tesla attempts to deal with flagging sales and challengers in the Chinese market. Chinese EV maker Nio reported a similar incident in which one of its SUVs caught fire while being repaired in central China. Nio said the fire was caused by a battery short circuit as a result of a chassis impact. The incidents have prompted concerns over the safety of EVs, which Tesla said is not an issue as its vehicles are far less likely to catch fire than their gas-driven counterparts.
]]>Chinese electric carmaker Xpeng the latest to jump into ride-hailing despite ongoing losses at market leader Didi – South China Morning Post
What happened: Electric vehicle (EV) maker Xiaopeng is preparing to take on Didi as it enters China’s competitive ride-hailing sector. The company was granted an operating license by Guangzhou authorities on Monday and began advertising jobs for fleet operators and mobility operations specialists on its website in March. Xiaopeng declined to comment on its timetable or expected fleet size, according to the South China Morning Post.
Why it’s important: Entering the ride-hailing market would put Xiaopeng up against market leader Didi, which has been losing money on many of its trips. The company said it was pocketing 19% of each fare in China, two percentage points lower than the cost of the trip. Ride-hailing operators have also seen increased scrutiny over the past year following two high profile murders of passengers using Didi’s carpooling service. Nonetheless, Xiaopeng could be looking for an additional revenue stream as the government cuts its EV subsidies nationwide, putting increased pressure on manufacturers as they either absorb the extra costs or pass them on to their customers.
]]>BYD, China’s largest producer of electric vehicles, says that recently announced cuts to government subsidies for new energy vehicles won’t impact the industry’s long-term growth.
In a filing to the Shenzhen Stock Exchange (SZSE) on Tuesday, the company said that the reductions will help shift the sector away from being policy driven to one driven by market conditions. BYD filed the disclosure after the company was asked by the SZSE to clarify issues in its 2018 annual report.
“Subsidies will have a short-term impact on demand and the profitability of new energy vehicle makers, but they will not alter the long-term growth trend of the new energy auto industry,” (our translation) the company said.
BYD added that it is difficult to predict the impact of the subsidy cuts on the company’s profits from new energy vehicles.
In March, the Chinese government announced changes to its subsidy structure, saying that automakers rely too heavily on government support to sell vehicles, thereby sacrificing innovation in the sector.
By mid-2019, the government will cut contributions by up to 50% for vehicles with a range of 400 kilometers or more. Meanwhile, those that can travel up to 250 kilometers will not be eligible for an allowance. The cuts mean that automakers will be forced to absorb the costs or pass them on to their customers, both of which could be potentially damaging for their businesses.
The government implemented the subsidy system in 2009 in order to spur growth in the industry. There are now nearly 500 registered new energy vehicle manufacturers in China, prompting concerns that a cull is on the horizon.
“The leading companies are expected to continue to increase market share and achieve faster growth,” BYD said.
The government has also implemented a “cap and trade” system, in which manufacturers producing more than 30,000 electric vehicles per year are required to earn credits equal to 10% of their output. Companies that don’t reach this can be fined. The system aims to ensure traditional manufacturers also produce new energy vehicles while providing a potential revenue stream for smaller players by allowing them to sell excess credits.
]]>Tesla Suddenly Catches Fire in Hong Kong Parking Lot, Times Says – Bloomberg
What happened: A Tesla Model S caught fire in a Hong Kong parking lot on Sunday, requiring firefighters to work for 45 minutes to put out the blaze. No indication as to what caused the fire has been given, and the company did not have an immediate comment on the matter, according to Bloomberg.
Why it’s important: The fire comes less than a month after a Model S spontaneously combusted in a Shanghai parking garage, destroying surrounding vehicles. Just days later, Chinese rival Nio reported one of its vehicles had caught fire while being repaired in the central Chinese city of Xi’an. The fires have sparked concern over the safety of electric vehicles (EVs). Last year, at least 40 new energy vehicles, which include electrics and hybrids, caught fire in China, according to the State Administration for Market Regulation. Tesla has previously claimed that its vehicles are 10 times less likely to combust than gas-driven cars.
]]>Ride-hailing giant Didi has launched an open platform for smart transportation, giving enterprises and developers access to its artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities.
“Open cooperation will promote faster and better development of intelligent travel,” Didi CTO Bob Zhang said in a statement on Didi’s official WeChat account on Thursday.
Didi will provide access to its machine learning services and AI platform, which will include voice, image, and natural language processing. Other applications include scene perception, mapping, and travel safety. Didi launched the platform at the Global AI Product Application Expo in the eastern Chinese city of Suzhou on Thursday.
The company said the services could be used in sectors including urban transportation, logistics, and finance, among others.
The system is aimed at providing Didi’s smart transportation services to urban transport managers, enterprises, upstream and downstream partners in the automotive industry, and developers.
Zhang has said that Didi has the “best transportation data in the world.” The company has previously provided anonymized trip data and computing resources to researchers through its Gaia Initiative. Didi’s academic collaboration expanded recently through a partnership with US-based Berkeley DeepDrive (BDD) Industry Consortium.
Didi has launched several new products to secure its place in the market as the company seeks to mitigate risks to its ride-hailing service. Didi has faced scrutiny and regulatory censure following the high-profile murders of two passengers by their drivers using the platform last year.
These challenges have hurt Didi’s bottom line, as the company reportedly lost nearly RMB 11 billion (around $1.6 billion) in 2018. Didi also revealed recently that nearly one-third of its commission revenue was spent on driver subsidies in the last quarter of 2018.
In April, Didi launched an online financial management system for auto leasing and fleet companies in China. Didi said that it expected the system to serve around 1,500 leasing partners in its network by the end of 2019. The platform allows Didi’s auto partners to manage leasing accounts and financial plans, and gives them access to risk analysis and data analytics tools.
In January, the company also began providing financial services to its passengers within its app in China, which includes access to funds for critical illness protection, wealth management, personal credit, and lending services. Didi also expanded its automobile financing solutions to users, having previously only been available to drivers and car owners on the platform.
]]>Chinese AI start-up Megvii raises $750 million ahead of planned HK IPO – Reuters
What happened: Artificial intelligence (AI) startup Megvii has raised $750 million in a new round of funding. The fundraising brings the company’s valuation to more than $4 billion prior to a Hong Kong IPO later this year. Bank of China’s equity arm led the fundraising with $200 million. Also involved were Macquarie Group, ICBC Asset Management, Alibaba, and a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the world’s largest sovereign wealth funds.
Why it’s important: Chinese and foreign investors are pumping money into artificial intelligence and facial recognition startups in China as the government prioritizes the technology’s development and use. Facial recognition applications have become ubiquitous in China, being used for everything from payments to tracking people’s whereabouts. Megvii’s technology is used by the Chinese government, as well as companies like Alibaba, Huawei, and Ant Financial. China aims to become a leader in AI by 2030 and overtake rivals like the US. Sensetime, the most valuable AI startup in the world worth nearly $8 billion, also hails from China.
]]>Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi is “hot on the tail” of US rival Uber in Mexico, according to a new report, as competition in the sector heats up amid aggressive expansions into new markets.
In November and December Didi was the most popular travel app in Mexico’s Apple App Store, with Uber coming in second. Since then, the Chinese company has ranked second according to an analysis by research company ValueChampion. “Didi has been hot on [Uber’s] tail in Mexico just as Lyft has been in the US,” Duckju Kang, ValueChampion CEO said in the report. Didi launched its services in Mexico in April 2018.
Uber drew attention to the competition with Didi in its IPO prospectus, which it filed on April 11, saying that the Chinese company had “made significant investments to gain or maintain category position in certain markets in Latin America.”
Didi has faced scrutiny in China after two passengers were killed by their drivers on separate occasions last year. The incidents took place on the company’s carpooling service Hitch, which has subsequently been suspended indefinitely. Regulators have since tightened their grip on the ride-hailing sector by imposing stricter rules. Didi has responded by implementing more stringent driver background checks, while various cities require drivers and cars to be registered in the city in which they operate. The result is a decrease in the pool of available drivers.
Didi reportedly lost RMB 11 billion (around $1.5 billion) in 2018, almost five times higher than its 2017 losses of $400 million. The company recently revealed that nearly one-third of its commission revenue was spent on driver subsidies in the fourth quarter of 2018.
To make up for losses at home the company has been expanding aggressively around the world. Didi’s Japanese joint venture with Softbank will expand to 13 cities in the country following its launch in Osaka last year. The company has sought to take on Uber globally, but most notably in Latin America. Along with operations in Mexico, both companies are competing in Brazil. Didi is also seeking drivers in Colombia and has advertised for jobs in Chile and Peru.
“A combination of high valuation, a lot of capital and difficult competition in local markets creates an imperative for these companies to expand into other markets in order to justify their valuations with better growth prospects,” Kang said in the report.
Aside from being Didi’s competitor, Uber is also a shareholder. The US company sold its operations in China to Didi in 2016 in exchange for an approximately 18% stake in the company. According to its IPO prospectus, Uber estimates its holdings in Didi amounted to around 15% as of September 2018.
The conflict between Didi and Uber has not only manifested itself in a battle for market share, but also in investments. In March, Uber acquired Careem, a ride-hailing service that operates across the Middle East. Didi had invested in the service prior to Uber’s acquisition. The move highlights Uber’s intent in making it as difficult as possible for competitors to expand into new markets, according to ValueChampion, thereby cutting off possible new revenue streams.
]]>Morgan Stanley: Tesla is going to need big China sales next year in order to make it – CNBC
What happened: Tesla’s recently announced $2.7 billion capital raise is a “bridge” solution, and the company needs to begin manufacturing and selling lower-cost vehicles in China, according to Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas. However, he said that the electric vehicle (EV) maker’s increased dependency on China and robotaxis undermines its investment story. Morgan Stanley said it doesn’t expect significant deliveries of Tesla’s Model 3 until the first quarter of 2020.
Why it’s important: Jonas’ less-than-optimistic outlook comes after Tesla reported disappointing first quarter results and has attempted to boost slow deliveries in China. The company’s image took a hit last month following an incident in which one of its vehicles self-ignited while parked in Shanghai’s Xuhui District. Chinese luxury ride-hailing platform Shenma Zhuanche has also taken to social media to voice its grievances over the EV maker’s after-sales service and quality issues, saying that 20% of its 280 Teslas have had electromechanical faults. The US company is expected to begin production at its Shanghai plant later this year to provide lower-priced vehicles to the Chinese market.
]]>Nio ES8’s burning incident results from battery short circuit caused by chassis impact – Gasgoo
What happened: Electric vehicle maker Nio said an incident last month in which one of its ES8 SUVs self-ignited at a service center in central China was a result of severe chassis impacts that led to the car’s battery short-circuiting. The company said that it had not checked the chassis as it was not requested by its owner, who asked to have the front bumper and windshield repaired.
Why it’s important: The ES8 fire came a day after a Tesla Model S self-combusted in a parking garage in Shanghai and a few days prior to a BYD igniting in the central Chinese province of Hubei. No one was injured in any of the incidents, according to the automakers. However, the fires have garnered a lot of attention and called into question the safety of the vehicles. EV makers like Tesla have claimed that electric cars are 10 times less likely to catch fire than their gas-powered counterparts. According to China’s top market regulator, around 40 new energy vehicles, which include hybrids and electrics, caught fire in China in 2018.
]]>Security lapse exposed a Chinese smart city surveillance system – TechCrunch
What happened: A security researcher has found an unprotected smart city database containing hundreds of facial recognition scans from Beijing’s diplomatic district, Liangmaqiao. The database was hosted by Chinese public cloud provider Alibaba Cloud and went unprotected for weeks, according to TechCrunch. The system contained information relating to people’s movements, their ethnicities, and whether they were of interest or wanted by the police. The database also included names and ID numbers. It is unclear who owns the database and corresponding surveillance system.
Why it’s important: The incident is the latest in a slew of open databases being found containing sensitive personal information gleaned from surveillance systems around the country. One such database, discovered by Dutch security researcher Victor Gevers, included information about internet cafe goers, including social media and messaging data, as well as names and ID numbers. With the ubiquity of surveillance and smart city systems come risks of hacks and data leaks. However, recent incidents show that incompetence is the greatest danger, with sensitive information being left in the open without adequate protection.
]]>Clouds are gathering on China’s electric vehicle (EV) front, eroding the allure of the once-attractive proposition for car makers and foreshadowing an industry cull.
China is home to around 500 EV manufacturers battling for a share of the market. But investors are getting cold feet as EV startups struggle with cutthroat competition, shifting regulations, and the need to partner with existing car makers.
Li Xiang, CEO of EV firm CHJ Automotive, warned last month that investors have become more cautious and that a large portion of startups would be forced out of the market. As a result, he said, more than 90% of investors would lose money.
“Everybody is starting to feel the pressure,” Tu Le, founder of consultancy Sina Auto Insights, told TechNode. “There’s less venture capital money to go around.” VCs are having a hard time believing sales forecasts given China’s economic downturn, Le added.
The concern comes as Chinese authorities exert pressure on EV manufacturers that could burst the hypercompetitive bubble.
In March, Nio, an EV manufacturer headquartered in Shanghai, abandoned plans to build its production plant in the city. The company said it was opting instead for a government-sanctioned “joint manufacturing” model with a major production partner.
But industry insiders told TechNode at the time that Nio’s ambitions for its plant were quashed by China’s national planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), to combat overcapacity in the auto industry.
Meanwhile, rival EV startup Xiaopeng has struggled to sell its cars. Its G3 SUV went on sale in mid-December. The Guangzhou-based company delivered 1,500 EVs in the first quarter of this year, compared to nearly 4,000 from Nio, and 21,000 from industry leader BYD in March.
According to Neil Wang, Greater China President of consulting firm Frost & Sullivan, the next few years will be tough for EV startups, whether or not they have entered the mass production stage.
As few as 10% of China’s roughly 500 EV manufacturers are expected to survive. Three years ago, investment funds flowed freely, creating the situation that exists today. But with China’s economic slowdown and EV market saturation, startups are now having trouble raising funds.
Investor caution manifested itself at Nio’s IPO last year. The company raised just $1 billion of its $1.8 billion fundraising target amid increasing competition and questions about profitability among EV startups. Nio priced its shares at $6.26, the lower end of its $6.25 to $8.25 range.
Before Nio’s IPO, the company warned in its prospectus that costs would increase significantly in the future. Nio said it expected to spend $1.8 billion in the three years after it went public.
Just last month, Carsten Breitfeld, the co-founder of EV startup Byton, left that company with a dramatic flourish—on April 16, he made an appearance representing rival car maker Iconiq at the biggest annual auto industry event in China. His departure was reportedly a result of tension within the company over new funding, which Byton has so far failed to secure.
Byton was reportedly seeking an additional $500 million to fund mass production of its first vehicle, the M-Byte, as well as research and development. Last week, the company announced it would be closing its Series C this summer.
To be sure, these funding challenges aren’t limited to the EV sector. The so-called “capital winter” has affected Chinese startups more generally.
According to market research firm Zero2IPO, venture capital raised in 2018 fell by more than 10% compared to the previous year. But internet firms require far fewer physical assets than auto manufacturers. If an EV startup misses out on investment, it could result in missed production targets, which could have a direct impact on sales and the company’s bottom line.
Being the biggest EV market in the world comes with its own set of problems. Fitch predicts that EV capacity in China will reach 20 million vehicles per year by 2020—that’s 10 times higher than the government’s goal of 2 million.
While sales of EVs in the first quarter of 2019 reached 225,000 units, up 120% year-on-year, these cars made up just 4% of the auto market in 2018. Chinese consumers are not buying vehicles as quickly as automakers are producing them—total car sales dropped by around 15% year-on-year in the fourth quarter of 2018, falling from 5.5 million to 4.8 million units.
To address this, the NDRC in January enacted rules to limit new capacity, including measures to “strictly control” any new production capabilities for new-energy vehicles. But these rules make it significantly harder for EV startups to compete with traditional auto manufacturers—and are said to have motivated Nio’s decision to abandon plans for its plant.
In 2017, Nio had announced plans to build a production facility in Shanghai’s suburban Jiading District. However, its proposal was blocked earlier this year after US rival Tesla broke ground in Shanghai on its first overseas plant, the Gigafactory 3. Nio will now have to wait until Tesla’s plant is complete and has reached capacity before it can build its own factory.
NDRC’s new regulations state that companies are only permitted to build factories if they have an annual capacity of 100,000 vehicles. Firms are also required to have sold 30,000 cars globally or have made RMB 3 billion (around $445 million) in the previous two years.
David Zhang, an independent auto consultant who has worked with China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said that it is difficult for an automaker to control and optimize its costs if it doesn’t have its own factory.
The regulations could have side effects, compounding monetary issues. In a report earlier this year, ratings agency Fitch warned that the tougher rules are likely lead to a cooling-off in EV investment.
Some EV startups are partnering with state-owned auto manufacturers to build their vehicles, Nio included. But these tie-ups can be expensive for smaller companies.
Nio’s cars are manufactured by JAC in Hefei, the capital of East China’s Anhui province, with the startup paying the state-owned carmaker for every vehicle produced. According to Nio’s IPO prospectus, the company is also required to reimburse JAC for any losses incurred as a result of Nio’s production. As of July 2018, Nio had paid JAC RMB 65 million (around $10 million) for its 2018 second-quarter losses. The company lost a total of $1.4 billion in 2018.
Creating a car brand is no easy task for EV makers, many of whom are newcomers to the industry. In addition, some are constrained by their manufacturing relationships with brands whose image is not strong, if not downright negative. For example, JAC is known for producing lower-cost vehicles, which contrasts with Nio’s luxury brand image. “It is disadvantageous for user perception,” Ming Lih Chan, industry analyst at Frost & Sullivan, told TechNode.
Nio isn’t alone. Xiaopeng has a similar production agreement with Haima, a subsidiary of the state-owned auto manufacturer FAW Group. Haima manufactures Xiaopeng’s vehicles in Zhengzhou, located in Central China’s Henan province. Xiaopeng is not publicly listed, and details of that arrangement were not immediately available.
According to Frost & Sullivan’s Wang, the financial pressures that EV startups face in building their own facilities are made worse by joint manufacturing policies and regulations that create higher barriers to building plants.
China was late to the auto manufacturing game, lagging behind the US, Japan, and Germany in terms of its global footprint. To change this, the Chinese government invested heavily to promote EV production.
In 2009, the government introduced subsidies for EV buyers, hoping to spur growth in the nascent industry. Almost a decade later, China is selling more than half of the world’s 2 million new-energy vehicle passenger cars, according to EV-Volumes.
But authorities believe automakers now rely too heavily on these subsidies to sell their vehicles, sacrificing innovation and vehicle development as a result.
In March, the government made drastic changes to the EV subsidy system. By the middle of 2019, electric cars with a range of more than 400 kilometers will have their subsidies cut by 50%. Meanwhile, EVs that are only able to travel 250 kilometers will not receive an allowance.
EV startups will face a choice: They can either absorb the costs or pass them on their customers. Passing on the expenses makes their offerings less attractive. Absorbing them could be harmful or even fatal to their bottom line.
The subsidy reductions are not unwarranted, but they will have a significant effect on smaller companies. “EV startups usually do not have very strong financial strength; subsidy cuts will significantly affect these companies and are expected to bring much more financial pressure to them,” said Wang.
Authorities have also implemented a “cap-and-trade” system requiring manufacturers that produce more than 30,000 vehicles to earn credits equal to 10% of the company’s output. The move is meant to ensure that traditional gas-powered automakers are also building EVs. Companies that do not earn enough credits can be fined. However, they are permitted to purchase credits from manufacturers that have excess, creating a potential revenue stream for EV startups.
According to Zhang, every point was expected to fetch around RMB 5,000. In reality, they may not be as lucrative as anticipated. “Each point is [now] only a few hundred yuan, which is very different from previous expectations,” he said.
]]>Embattled electric vehicle (EV) maker Faraday Future has received another lifeline in the wake of a dispute with Chinese real estate giant Evergrande—one of the startup’s major investors.
Faraday announced on Monday that it had received $225 million in bridge financing ahead of the company completing a $1.25 billion capital raise, which it expects to close this year. The latest financing, led by US-based asset management firm Birch Lake Associates, is aimed at helping to bring Faraday’s flagship FF91 SUV to market.
Part of the financing seeks to reassure Faraday’s suppliers after the financial turmoil the company has seen since late last year, and to “obtain their commitments” to make sure the FF91 enters mass production. To secure the financing, Faraday had its intellectual property and technology valued, which the company said are worth $1.25 billion.
The financing comes after Faraday set up a joint venture (JV) with once-popular Chinese gaming company The9 to launch Faraday’s V9 EV in China, a vehicle based on the FF91. Both companies will own 50% of the JV, for which The9 pledged $600 million. Faraday expects the JV to reach an annual production capacity of 300,000 vehicles and begin selling cars by 2020.
Faraday was also said to be in talks with EVAIO Blockchain over a possible $900 million in funding last November. The company has subsequently made no mention of the deal.
Faraday said on Monday it has a “growing fleet” of pre-production vehicles to test features for its FF91. The company has yet to enter mass production five years after its launch, mainly as a result of a series of financial issues that have ended in layoffs, unpaid wages, furloughs, and property selloffs. Faraday had previously planned to begin production of the FF91 at the end of 2018.
The company’s troubles began in 2017 but culminated after a fallout with Evergrande. The Chinese real estate giant backed out of a $2 billion investment deal with Faraday at the end of 2018 following an extended dispute over terms. Faraday had requested an advance on a future payment from Evergrande, a plea the Chinese company refused. Faraday then sought arbitration in Hong Kong.
The companies eventually settled the dispute, with Evergrande taking control over Faraday’s operations in China.
Faraday has since sought alternative investment. The EV maker has had to sell its headquarters in Los Angeles for around $10 million to stay above water. Faraday has also put its 900-acre, $40 million property in Las Vegas up for sale.
In the midst of Faraday’s financial issues, the company also lost a number of its senior executives as a result of the “devastating impact” its troubles were having on company employees and the “ripple effect” on its suppliers and the industry.
]]>Now it’s personal: 32 jailed in China for stealing 39 million pieces of private data – South China Morning Post
What happened: More than 30 people have been jailed in China as part of a three-year nationwide investigation into a gang that traded nearly 39 million pieces of private data. The group was trading names, addresses, dates of birth, and ID and mobile numbers. The information was stolen by hacking personal computers as well as government departments. One of the leaders of the gang worked for a painting and decorating company in the southwestern city of Chongqing. He said he had been selling personal data since 2012.
Why it’s important: Despite government measures to control how personal data is handled and stored, data theft remains a significant issue in China. Not only is there a wealth of it—police across China processed more than 1,800 cases concerning 50 billion pieces of private information between March and June last year—it can also be cheap. Some cases involve data going for as little as RMB 0.10 (around $0.01) apiece. Data thieves have also become increasingly sophisticated in avoiding the police, forming complex networks across China and Southeast Asia to avoid arrest.
]]>Ride-hailing giant Didi will set up a team of 2,000 service staff to increase its focus on offline driver management and support, the latest in a series of attempts to improve safety for both drivers and passengers on the company’s platform.
Fu Qiang, CEO of Didi’s Ride-hailing Business Group, said in an open memo to its drivers that the company aims to “help drivers solve the problems they encounter in their work,” while soliciting their feedback.
“We firmly believe that only by serving the driver well can the driver serve the passenger well,” Fu said.
The company said it would continue providing its drivers with safety training, which Didi hopes will enable them to protect themselves while “providing passengers with safer and better service,” according to Fu. In March, a Didi driver was murdered by a passenger in the central Chinese city of Changde, calling into question the safety of drivers as well as passengers. The incident followed two others in which drivers were targeted in 2017 and 2018.
Didi’s safety work has so far mainly focused on passengers, following the high profile murders of two Didi users on separate occasions in 2018. The company’s safety features include a driver-passenger blacklist function, emergency contacts, an in-trip panic button, and facial recognition systems that link a driver with a vehicle, among others. The company also pledged to spend $20 million on customer service in the wake of last year’s murders.
Didi CEO Cheng Wei said in an internal meeting in February that the company planned to lay off 2,000 employees, or 15% of its workforce, following a restructuring that aimed to improve safety and compliance. Sources told TechNode at the time that Didi planned to hire an additional 2,500 employees following the layoffs, which included headcount for offline driver management.
As Didi faces tougher regulations governing its drivers at home following the murders, the company has sought to expand its footprint abroad. Latin America has become a key battleground for Didi as it seeks to take on international rival Uber. The company has launched operations in Mexico and Brazil, with plans to expand to Peru, Chile, and Colombia.
]]>Kenya secures $666 million from China for tech city, highway – Reuters
What happened: China is funding a data center in a tech city outside Kenya’s capital of Nairobi as well as a highway linking the capital with its airport. The $666 million deal consists of low-interest loans and partnerships with private companies. The data center will be developed in Konza, a tech city an hour’s drive from Nairobi, by Chinese telecom firm Huawei, according to a statement from Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who is in Beijing attending a forum for President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
Why it’s important: Kenya has over the past few years looked to China to provide funding and technology for infrastructure projects that it hopes will fuel the country’s development. This includes a controversial railway linking the coastal city of Mombasa with Nairobi. Critics worry that Kenya is putting its future generations at risk of burying itself in debt by borrowing from China. There are also concerns over what may happen if countries that take out loans from China default on their debts, a criticism that western leaders have voiced about many of Xi’s BRI projects. The Kenyan government has brushed off this unease, saying that building better infrastructure will stimulate economic growth.
]]>Google bans app developer with 600 million downloads for being a fake click factory – The Verge
What happened: Google is banning popular Chinese app developer Do Global, which is partly owned by search giant Baidu and has more than 600 million downloads, from its Play Store after it was found committing ad fraud and abusing app permissions. The company allegedly faked ad clicks to boost revenue. According to researchers, at least six of Do Global’s apps contained code that allowed fake ad clicking that would run even when the apps were closed.
Why it’s important: Nearly half of Do Global’s 100 apps have so far been removed from the Play Store. In addition to abolishing the apps, Google has also moved to stop Do Global profiting from AdMob, the search giant’s mobile advertising platform. Do Global was a subsidiary of Baidu until it was spun off last summer. Baidu now holds a 34% stake in the company. The removals follow similar moves by Google against Cheetah Mobile and Kika Tech, which are also Chinese app developers. However, Google did not ban the internet firms entirely, only taking action against the infringing apps.
]]>Ride-hailing platform Shenma Zhuanche has called out US electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Tesla for quality issues, claiming that problems with the automaker’s vehicles have cost the company up to RMB 6.5 million (around $965,000).
With nearly 280 Tesla vehicles in its fleet, Shenma asserts that it is the largest buyer of the company’s vehicles in the Asia Pacific region. However, Shenma said in a post on microblogging platform Weibo on Friday that 20% of the Teslas it owns have had electromechanical issues.
The company also claimed that Tesla’s after-sales service is “unsatisfactory,” and inefficiency when dealing with complaints has directly impacted its services, with the average disruption time from repairs and maintenance lasting 45 days.
Shenma said Tesla’s after-sale service did not meet its needs because the EV manufacturer does not have enough service stations or vehicle parts available in China.
Tesla refused to comment when reached by TechNode.
Shenma has subsequently posted three ads on the Thompson Reuters building located in Times Square in New York City to draw attention to the issue.
Telsa faced scrutiny in China last week after one of its vehicles caught fire and exploded in a parking garage in Shanghai. Following the incident, the hashtag “Tesla self ignites” (our translation) went viral on Weibo, with related posts viewed 110 million times as of Sunday morning.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk took to Twitter to defend the safety of EVs shortly after the incident, saying there are “over a million combustion engine car fires” a year.
Shenma’s complaint and last’s week’s fire come at a sensitive time for Tesla. The EV company has been working to boost flagging sales in China. Tesla missed its expected revenue for the first quarter, earning $4.5 billion of an anticipated $5.2 billion. The company’s share price fell to $235 by the end of the day Friday from $258 when it reported its first-quarter results on April 24.
Shenma is aimed at the higher-end market and operates a fleet of new energy vehicles, including Teslas and BMWs, among others. According to the company’s website, it offers its services in major Chinese cities including Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou.
Update: This story has been updated to reflect Tesla’s response to Shenma’s claims.
]]>Tech giants Baidu and Bytedance on Friday filed lawsuits against each other for unfair competition, with both companies seeking RMB 90 million (around $13 million) in damages and extended public apologies.
The companies filed their respective lawsuits at the Haidian District People’s Court in Beijing. They each also seek 30-day apologies posted to their competitor’s website and app.
Baidu alleges that Bytedance stole a number of its TOP1 search results, a feature that displays relevant information from a Baidu search query without having to click through to get information. For example, if a user searches for the weather forecast, a graphic displaying conditions will be displayed as the first result on a search page.
Baidu said it used anti-counterfeiting measures including watermarking and inserting code into its TOP1 results, which enabled the company to track their usage. The search giant said the allegedly stolen results were used in content aggregator Jinri Toutiao’s newly launched search engine function. “This kind of behavior is a blatant theft of [Baidu’s] technology,” the company said in a statement.
Bytedance told TechNode the company is actively responding to the lawsuit.
Hours after Baidu, Bytedance filed a lawsuit against Baidu for “stealing” videos from its short video app Douyin, media outlet PEdaily reported.
Bytedance found that a lite search app from Baidu named “Jiandan Sousuo,” or “Simple Search” includes a tab for popular videos on Douyin. The Douyin owner added that Baidu erased the watermark on Douyin’s videos to make the “stealing” less conspicuous.
Baidu declined to comment when reached by TechNode.
In its filing, Bytedance stated that Baidu’s search app has “maliciously robbed” Douyin of its rightful users and traffic, which significantly damages Douyin’s operating results. Bytedance also condemned Baidu for increasing the competitive advantage of Simple Search at the expense of Douyin’s growth, calling the gains “unearned” and accusing Baidu of unfair competition.
Launched in July 2017, Simple Search is a search app that looks similar to Baidu.com and is available on iOS and Android. The app promises to never include ads.
Both companies have taken an increasingly litigious stance toward one another. In January, Baidu sued Bytedance, along with professional networking platform Maimai, for RMB 5 million over allegations of defamation and copyright infringement. Two months later, Bytedance vice president Li Liang won a defamation suit against Baidu, in which he said the company posted slanderous material about him on its website and app.
Additional reporting by Tony Xu.
]]>An incident on Sunday in which a Tesla vehicle caught fire in a Shanghai parking garage may have been caused by a battery short circuit, a preliminary investigation has found.
Tao Wei, an automobile defect expert at China’s General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection, and Quarantine, who is part of the investigation, told The Paper (in Chinese) that the finding came as a result of an initial check on Wednesday morning, though no data could be recovered as the car’s chip and battery had been destroyed. The evaluation was carried out at a Tesla test center in Shanghai.
In a statement on microblogging platform Weibo, Tesla said no preliminary conclusions had been formed, and that it would announce the results in a timely manner. “Please do not spread rumors,” the company added.
Closed-circuit video footage of a Tesla Model S billowing smoke and catching fire began making the rounds on social media earlier this week. The car was mostly destroyed while surrounding vehicles also sustained damage. Tesla responded by saying it was sending a team to Shanghai to investigate the incident.
The fire comes at a sensitive time for Tesla. The company has been trying to boost flagging sales in China and will report its first-quarter results on Wednesday, in which it is expected to post a loss.
Rival EV maker Nio said it was launching a similar investigation after one of its SUVs caught fire on Monday at a service center in Xi’an, a city in central China. Nio said at the time that no there were no casualties or other property damage as a result of the fire.
Sunday’s incident is not the first time a Tesla vehicle has self-ignited in China. In 2017, a Model S caught fire at a charging station in the city, damaging a vehicle nearby. The company has previously claimed that its vehicles are 10 times less likely to catch fire than gas-driven cars.
According to China’s State Administration for Market Regulation, around 40 new energy vehicles, including electrics and hybrids, caught fire in China last year.
]]>Didi-SoftBank taxi-hailing JV expands to 13 cities across Japan – Reuters
What happened: Didi-Softbank joint venture Didi Mobility Japan has launched its taxi-hailing services in Tokyo and Kyoto and will expand to 13 cities across Japan. The service initially landed in Osaka last year, targeting Chinese tourists and residents alike. The company joined forces with taxi firms as it sought to take on rivals backed by Sony and Toyota.
Why it’s important: Didi has been pushing to increase its presence internationally as it faces regulatory difficulties and driver shortages at home. The company this year plans to focus on internationalization and aims to take on rivals like Uber in international markets. Didi this week began recruiting drivers in Colombia as it pushes ahead with its Latin American expansion plans. However, the situation is different in Japan, where the company cannot offer ride-hailing services, as they are effectively banned. Instead, Didi has partnered with taxi operators.
]]>China’s Didi recruits Colombian drivers ahead of Bogota launch-Reuters
What happened: Ride-hailing giant Didi is recruiting drivers in Bogota, the capital of Colombia, as it prepares to launch its services in the country. Didi said in a statement that it hopes it can “meet the market’s expectations” as it recruits drivers with “an attractive offer.” The company did not give any indication as to when it would launch its services.
Why it’s important: Didi has identified Latin America as a critical battleground in its attempts to take on international rival Uber. The two companies are already going head-to-head in Mexico and Brazil, where Didi has attracted drivers with higher pay and bonuses. The move also highlights Didi’s efforts to offset issues its faces in China, including stricter policing of its platform. The company has already moved some of its senior executives to Latin America to lead its expansion in countries including Brazil, Colombia, and Peru. Uber is popular in Colombia, but illegal, with drivers risking a 25-year license suspension if they are caught working for the platform.
]]>Electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Nio has launched an investigation after one of its vehicles caught fire on Monday at a service center in central China.
The company said in a statement on microblogging platform Weibo that one of its ES8 SUVs had been undergoing maintenance at a service center in Xi’an when the incident occurred. There were no casualties and no other property damage, the company said.
Posts on Weibo relating to the incident had been read more than 850,000 times as of Monday afternoon. Videos show an ES8 billowing white smoke while Nio staff fight the flames with handheld extinguishers. In another video of the same incident, firefighters can be seen battling the blaze.
The fire comes amid heightened challenges to Nio’s business, including being forced to abandon plans for its own manufacturing plant in Shanghai. The company has seen its stock price fall by as much as 50% since it released its fourth-quarter and year-end results in early March.
The incident is the second in the same number of days in which an EV has caught fire in China. On Sunday, a Tesla Model S reportedly spontaneously combusted and exploded in a parking garage in Shanghai, damaging surrounding vehicles. The US EV maker also said it was looking into the incident.
Last year, a test vehicle for rival EV maker WM Motors combusted at a research institute in Chengdu, a city in China’s southwestern Sichuan province. The incident occurred while the vehicle was being dismantled, the company said at the time. In 2018, more than 40 new energy vehicles, which include electric and hybrids, caught fire in China, according to the State Administration for Market Regulation.
]]>Tesla says investigating incident of parked car exploding in Shanghai – Reuters
What happened: US-based electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla said it is investigating an incident in which one of its vehicles caught fire in a Shanghai parking garage. A video of the incident went viral on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo with the hashtag “Tesla self-ignites.” The Model S burst into flames and exploded, damaging surrounding vehicles. Tesla said it had sent a team to the scene and that no one was hurt.
Why it’s important: The incident comes at an inopportune time for Tesla. The company is trying to revive its sales in China, which have flagged as a result of Sino-US trade tensions. Tesla is also due to hold an investors’ day on Monday focusing on autonomous driving. This is not the first time Tesla’s vehicles have caught fire in Shanghai. In 2017, a Model S self-ignited at a charging station in the city, destroying another Tesla nearby. Similar incidents have occurred in the US, both while stationary and as a result of a crash. The company has said previously that its vehicles are ten times less likely to catch fire than gas driven cars.
]]>Artificial intelligence (AI) company iFlytek’s first quarter revenue dropped by 25% from the end of last year, while research and development (R&D) spending rose and financial expenses ballooned.
iFlytek’s first-quarter revenue reached nearly RMB 2 billion (around $300 million), down from RMB 2.6 billion in the fourth quarter of 2018, but up 40% year on year, according to its latest financial results, released this week.
At the same time, the company published its annual report, with 2018 revenue of RMB 8 billion, up 45% compared to 2017. Net profits for 2018 rose 25% year on year.
iFlytek said its financial expenses swelled by more than 400% during the quarter, mainly due to a decrease in interest income and an increase in interest expenses. Meanwhile, the company’s spending on R&D nearly doubled, reaching RMB 250 million.
Listed in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen, iFlytek is one of China’s five “AI champions,” along with Baidu, Tencent, Alibaba, and Sensetime. The company focuses on natural language processing, speech evaluation, speech recognition, and claims to have more than 70% market share in China.
The development of AI is a top priority for Chinese authorities. The State Council, China’s cabinet, has laid out plans to become a world leader in the technology and create a domestic industry worth $150 billion by 2030.
iFlytek provides several consumer-facing services, including translation, but also offers its voice recognition platforms to Chinese healthcare and education providers, as well as to the country’s judiciary.
The company has been developing AI systems to assist in China’s courtrooms. iFlytek aims to help judges determine whether evidence could support a criminal sentence, and which laws and regulations can be used for judgment. In January, a court in Shanghai adopted the 206 System, created by iFlytek and Chinese judicial, public security, and procuratorial organs. The system can transcribe speech while identifying speakers, and accept voice commands.
However, iFlytek has not been immune to controversy. The company was accused by an interpreter at a conference in Shanghai last year of passing off his translation as one by the company’s AI. The incident went viral on Zhihu, China’s answer to question-and-answer platform Quora. Iflytek dismissed the claims.
]]>Aptiv takes its self-driving car ambitions (and tech) to China – Techcrunch
What happened: US-based self-driving software company Aptiv is opening an autonomous mobility center in Shanghai, with plans to eventually deploy its technology on public roads. The company is currently in talks with prospective partners for mapping commercial deployment of its cars in China.
Why it’s important: While Aptiv has technically been active in China since 1993, its mobility center will mark the first time the company has had autonomous vehicle (AV) operations in the country. Aptiv sees China as an important part of its business, given the extent to which the market is expected to grow between now and 2040. However, red tape could cause trouble for its China operations. Foreign self-driving technology companies face restrictions when it comes to high-resolution mapping and data collection. Partnerships with Chinese companies will play a key role in its ability to function effectively. The company also has AV operations in the US and Singapore.
]]>Executives at electric vehicle manufacturer Nio are putting a positive spin on the company’s future prospects, despite mounting challenges to its business.
Talking to the media on Tuesday at industry expo Auto Shanghai, Nio co-founder and executive vice president Jack Cheng said he is not going to worry about the company’s sales performance, which has experienced a “greater than anticipated slowdown,” according to the company’s latest financial results.
“We’re a startup company [and] we’re moving ahead with our capacity in our manufacturing partnership,” Cheng said. “There will be a lot happening in the next couple of years,” he added, alluding to the company’s self-driving plans.
At the show, Nio CEO William Li teased a sedan dubbed the ET Preview, a first for the company, which has launched two SUVs. Nio did not provide any additional information about the new vehicle.
Nio has also opened up its charging services to other EV brands for the first time, making them available for car owners through a mini program in popular messaging app WeChat.
But some analysts are not convinced. “Having these ancillary services like the mobile charging, that’s nice and all, but it’s not going to dent Nio’s bottom line,” Tu Le, founder of consultancy Sino Auto Insights, told TechNode.
Nio’s comments at Auto Shanghai come as the company seeks to tackle increasing pressures on its business, including lawsuits for allegedly misleading shareholders, slowing deliveries, and expensive manufacturing partnerships, all of which could hamper Nio’s development.
Still, that doesn’t seem to have inhibited the company from pulling out all the stops at the annual auto show, the largest in China, which alternates location between the eastern Chinese city and Beijing.
Nio’s booth at Auto Shanghai dwarfs those of its competitors, including Weltmeister and Xiaopeng. The display also outdoes some state-owned auto manufacturers. The impeccably designed space features a Nio House—one of many user centers the company has opened around China, an auditorium, and a display area for the company’s vehicles and services.
Nio is trying to give the impression that everything is fine, Le told TechNode. “Under the surface, they’re probably freaking out,” he said.
The company has been struggling to sell its vehicles. Since launching its flagship SUV, the ES8, in June last year, Nio has delivered around 15,000 cars. Nio saw a slowdown in sales in January and February, which it attributed to accelerated deliveries at the end of last year, seasonal holidays, and a slowing auto market in China. The company expects this trend to continue into the second quarter.
According to figures from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, electric vehicle sales reached more than 225,000 units in the first quarter of 2019, up 120% year on year. Meanwhile, total auto sales dropped more than 10% during the same period.
The majority of these sales were lower cost EVs that were also generally subsidized by the Chinese government, and the figures are not necessarily indicative of deliveries in the high-end market, where Nio is placed.
In the first quarter, Nio delivered nearly 4,000 ES8s, down by half compared to the last three months of 2018. The company launched the ES6, a more budget-friendly SUV, in December. According to its website, Nio will begin delivering the vehicle this quarter.
The company faces the challenge of dealing with costs that come faster than revenues, which is compounded by the fact that it is attempting to build its sales, Nio House, and charging network at the same time, Bill Russo, founder of consultancy Automobility, told TechNode. “This will test the patience of investors and they may need to get fresh capital,” he said.
Nio should be able to tap its deep-pocketed Tencent ecosystem investors for some time until the company can prove its business model can work, Russo added.
But declining sales and ballooning expenses also expose the company to greater scrutiny. “It’s like the emperor with no clothing,” Le said. “And because Nio is publicly traded they have exposure in China, but also internationally. “
Since Nio released its financial results in early March, the company’s share price has fallen by more than 50%. Aside from the delivery slowdown, the company made losses of $1.4 billion last year.
Shareholders have subsequently filed class action lawsuits against the company in the US, saying that Nio provided “misleading” statements that led to losses for investors. These include Nio backing out of plans to build its own factory, instead opting for a “little known” automaker to build its cars.
The company’s vehicles are currently produced by state-owned auto manufacturer JAC in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei.
The lawsuits also allege that the company failed to disclose the impact of government subsidy reductions on sales. Nio has said these claims do not have merit.
Shareholders’ legal actions, in which the company’s tops executives and board members are listed as defendants, could distract management from their core focus on Nio’s development. “Not only are they having problems with sales, but now management’s attention has to be divided between three or four fires that they need to put out,” said Le.
The “joint manufacturing” model with JAC will no doubt continue for over the next few years as Nio has been blocked from building its plant in Shanghai’s Jiading District, as a result of government rules targeting capacity glut. The factory was due to open by the end of 2020.
However, as part of its agreement with JAC, Nio is required to pay the state-owned firm for every vehicle produced. In addition, the company has agreed to compensate JAC for operating loses it incurs as a result of manufacturing the startup’s cars for the first three years of production.
According to its listing documents, as of the end of June 2018, Nio had paid JAC RMB 65 million (around $10 million) for its 2018 second-quarter losses.
]]>NXP invests in Chinese self-driving technology company Hawkeye – Reuters
What happened: Dutch chipmaker NXP Semiconductors has invested in Chinese self-driving tech company Hawkeye, though the financial terms of the agreement have not been disclosed. NXP aims to expand its involvement in the automotive radar market in China. The two companies also agreed that Hawkeye would offer its expertise in 77Ghz automotive radar, which helps avoid collisions, as well as a research team, and a lab in Shanghai.
Why it’s important: NXP has had a tough run in China. Chinese authorities last year blocked a $44 billion takeover of the company by US chipmaker Qualcomm. The two chipmakers have subsequently abandoned the deal. Nonetheless, NXP has said that it continues to see China as an avenue for its growth. A significant portion of its businesses comes from chips for automakers, with executives saying last year that the company’s biggest automotive market is China. The deal with Hawkeye highlights NXP’s continued focus on China, and its efforts to expand its expertise in automotive technology.
]]>China’s auto show highlights electric ambitions – AP
What happened: Automotive trade show Auto Shanghai, which opens this week, shows that global car makers are increasingly focused on making electric vehicles (EVs) designed for the Chinese market. Well-funded companies including General Motors, Volkswagen, and Nissan, among others, are looking to take on Chinese rivals BYD and BAIC Group, which have more than 10 years of experience in the low-price segment. At the Shanghai event, automakers are set to display dozens of EVs to compete with their gas-driven counterparts, while the Chinese government promotes electric cars as part of its Made in China 2025 Initiative.
Why it’s important: Chinese automakers account for just 10% of global sales of gas-powered vehicles. However, they are responsible for 50% of EV sales worldwide. According to an analyst interviewed by AP, the government’s push to shift to electric cars presents more of an opportunity than a threat to Chinese vehicle manufacturers. However, the country’s supply of close to 500 EV startups could exceed demand for electric cars even if the country is to reach its 2025 goal of these cars making up 20% of all vehicles on China’s roads. Subsidy cuts also represent a significant threat. Although unlikely to affect well-established traditional automakers, smaller technology-driven startups will no doubt suffer as a result of increased prices for consumers.
]]>China’s Geely launches new electric car brand ‘Geometry’ – Reuters
What happened: Chinese automaker Geely, which holds investments in Daimler and Volvo, has launched a premium electric vehicle (EV) brand as it seeks to boost production of new energy vehicles. Dubbed Geometry, the brand will focus on China but will also take orders overseas, with plans to launch 10 electric models by 2025. According to the company, customers have already placed 26,000 orders for its first model, the Geometry A.
Why it’s important: Geely is pushing aggressively into the EV market. In March, the company took a 50% stake in Daimler’s microcar brand Smart through a joint venture. The two companies will build a factory in China, and the vehicles are expected to go on sale by 2022. Geely is responding to an expected rise in demand for new energy vehicles that comes as China imposes limits on the production of petrol cars to reduce smog. Global automaker spending on EVs is expected to surge by $300 billion in the next five to 10 years. Of that figure, nearly half will target China, the world’s largest auto market.
]]>Cameras linked to Chinese government stir alarm in UK parliament – The Intercept
What happened: Security firm Hikvision has provided its cameras to parliament, as well as police, hospitals, and schools around the United Kingdom, raising concerns from politicians. The company is selling its equipment through a network of corporate partners, according to The Intercept. Hikvision says its cameras can be used with facial recognition software and linked to a database of identity data, allowing them to distinguish between known and unknown individuals.
Why it’s important: Hikvision has been accused of profiting from China’s mass surveillance system, which UK politicians say makes procurement problematic. The cameras also pose national security risks when placed in parliament, they said. Like Hikvision, Huawei has been subject to scrutiny as nations around the world consider whether to let the Chinese telecommunications provider take part in 5G deployment. Hikvision is 40% state-owned, and a member of the UK parliament’s second chamber, the House of Lords, likened using the company’s equipment to having a spy in their offices. Nonetheless, the UK is an attractive market for companies like Hikvision. Similar to China, the country is highly surveilled, with one camera for every 11 people.
]]>Baidu president of new business Zhang Yaqin has become embroiled in a class action lawsuit against Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer Nio after he served as a director at the company for three months last year.
Chinasoft International, where Zhang is a non-executive director, said in a disclosure to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange that Zhang had been named as a defendant in the suit against Nio. The legal action was filed in New York, with a similar suit being registered in California. Zhang served as a director at Nio between June and September 2018, according to Chinasoft.
Baidu was not immediately available when reached for comment.
The lawsuits against Nio allege that the company misrepresented itself in its IPO filing and violated US securities laws, resulting in losses for investors. Multiple law firms are currently involved in the New York and California suits, which were filed after Nio made public its fourth-quarter and full-year 2018 financials in early March. The law firms claim that a greater-than-expected slowdown in Nio deliveries let to a drastic decline in the company’s stock price, leading to losses for investors.
Other defendants include Nio CEO William Li, CFO Louis Hsieh, members of the company’s board, and IPO underwriters including Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, and JP Morgan.
A Nio spokesperson told TechNode that the company believes the allegations are without merit and that it would defend itself vigorously.
Nio’s share price dropped by 50% in the three weeks following the release of its earnings. The company identified the lawsuits as a risk factor in its annual report to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Apr. 2. Nio said that the company and certain members of its directors and officers had been named as defendants in the lawsuits.
In its financial results, Nio said it expected the slowdown to continue. The company projected that deliveries of its ES8 SUV would fall by more than 50% compared with the previous quarter.
According to a statement by Los Angeles-based Schall Law Firm, investors also incurred damages when Nio backed out of plans to build a production plant in Shanghai. The company initially planned to complete the plant by the end of 2020. Nio currently has a joint manufacturing agreement with state-owned vehicle manufacturer JAC Motors to build its vehicles in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei.
]]>Sleeping Chinese man robbed of US$1,800 as smartphone’s facial recognition system is caught napping – South China Morning Post
What happened: A pair of thieves managed to unlock a sleeping man’s smartphone and steal more than RMB 12,000 (around $1,800) as a result of faulty facial recognition technology. Police charged two of the victim’s roommates with theft after an investigation found they had unlocked the victim’s phone while he was sleeping to transfer the money using WeChat. The smartphone brand was not identified but police said it cost around RMB 1,000.
Why it’s important: Facial recognition technology holds a ubiquitous presence in China. Smart systems are used to track criminals, punish jaywalkers, make payments, and secure millions of mobile devices. However, the theft highlights the dangers of facial recognition when not implemented effectively. The device in question did not employ iris-scanning technology, allowing it to be unlocked even when its owner’s eyes were closed. Unsecured biometric data also poses a huge risk if it is leaked. Unlike passwords, which can be amended, facial data cannot be changed once compromised, making just one breach risky.
]]>Jia Yueting, CEO of embattled electric vehicle (EV) startup Faraday Future, has teased the company’s new car on social media shortly after partnering with a Chinese gaming firm on its production.
Jia posted a picture of the silhouette of the V9, which is based on the company’s FF91 SUV concept, on microblogging platforms Weibo and Twitter. He said that the new vehicle “blends design, AI, and seamless cabin connectivity.” The post marks the CEO’s return to Weibo after a two-month hiatus.
Late last month Faraday announced a deal with Chinese gaming company The9 to form a joint venture (JV) for the production, marketing, and sale of the V9 in China, with both sides holding equal control of the new firm. The9 pledged $600 million to the project, which is expected to reach an annual production capacity of 300,000 and begin selling the cars by 2020.
“That $600 million only gets them started on production,” Tu Le, founder of Beijing-based consultancy Sino Auto Insights, told TechNode. “They’ll need to sell a lot at the beginning to keep funding production.”
Faraday has yet to mass produce any vehicles. The company’s FF91 model was slated to begin production in December last year.
Faraday’s partnership with The9 comes among mounting financial trouble for the EV maker following a fallout with an investor, Chinese real estate giant Evergrande. The EV startup was forced to sell its headquarters in Los Angeles for around $10 million to stay afloat. The company has also put its 900-acre property in Las Vegas up for sale for $40 million.
Evergrande backed out of a $2 billion investment deal with Faraday at the end of 2018. Since then, Faraday has been seeking alternative investment. The breakup followed a months-long dispute over terms after Faraday requested an advance on a future payment from Evergrande. The Chinese company refused, and Faraday sought arbitration in Hong Kong. The companies eventually settled the dispute, with Evergrande taking control over Faraday’s operations in China.
Faraday’s new partner The9 was the second Chinese gaming company to list in the US, following Shangda Group. However, its business has mostly stagnated since it lost the rights to operate massively multiplayer online role-playing game “World of Warcraft” in China to NetEase in 2009.
“It’s two companies that need each other,” Le said of the deal between Faraday and The9.
]]>People need to wake up to dangers of AI, warns Google ethics adviser – South China Morning Post
What happened: A Hong Kong computer science professor and recently appointed member of Google’s new artificial intelligence (AI) ethics board has expressed his concern about the proliferation of AI, saying that “the cat is out of the bag.” De Kai, from the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, warned that more critical discussions need to be had about AI and its possible implications. He is the only Asian member of Google’s newly established ethics board.
Why it’s important: De Kai’s comments echo the sentiments of Tesla CEO Elon Musk and late British theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking. Kai emphasizes that referring to AI as the “fourth industrial revolution” is erroneous, saying the classification belittles its distinctness. He said what humanity faces has no precedent. Meanwhile, Google’s new ethics board was announced last week and has already faced backlash. The company’s employees and external critics have said that the board was set up to meet Google’s political needs, and criticized the inclusion of Kay Coles James, president of conservative US think tank Heritage Foundation.
]]>Autonomous vehicles (AVs) traveled more than 150,000 kilometers on Beijing’s roads in 2018, with search giant Baidu’s fleet accounting for more than 90% of the total, according to an industry report.
The trips were made by more than 50 vehicles from eight companies that have been granted licenses to test self-driving cars in the country’s capital, the city’s Municipal Commission of Transport and two other government departments said in the report (in Chinese).
Baidu’s 45 vehicles traveled almost 140,000 kilometers, taking the top spot in terms of mileage in the city. Self-driving startup Pony.ai conducted 10,000 kilometers of tests, while ride-hailing giant Didi’s vehicles traveled just 78 kilometers—the lowest figure of all eight companies. Also included are internet and social media giant Tencent, state-owned automaker BAIC, German car manufacturers Daimler and Audi, and new energy vehicle maker Nio.
While the report disclosed the total distance traveled by the AVs, it made no mention of how often human drivers were required to intervene and take control of the car—known as “disengagements.”
In February, California’s Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) released data on AV testing in the state, including the distance driven and the number of times a human driver was required to take over. Pony.ai and Baidu were among dozens of firms required to report to the US government body. The two Chinese companies logged 1,600 kilometers and 330 kilometers per disengagement, respectively.
However, the DMV’s reporting standards are also limited—companies are required to provide their own data, with no mention of weather, road type, or speed, all of which play a role in how effective a vehicle’s autonomous systems are.
Numerous cities around China have issued licenses for testing self-driving cars and the country has laid out formidable goals these types of vehicles. By 2020, the country expects half of all new cars on its roads to be autonomous or semi-autonomous, with the number of these vehicles predicted to be more than 8 million by 2035.
As a result, AVs have been made a priority as part of the country’s Made in China 2025 initiative, through which it aims to upgrade its economy and move up the value chain. AVs are particularly important for the country given that their success is underpinned by China’s artificial intelligence prowess, for which the government has set ambitious targets. The State Council, China’s cabinet, aims for the country to be a world leader in AI by 2030.
]]>Google blocks China ads that help bypass censorship – Financial Times
What happened: Google has stopped promoting ads in China for two websites that review virtual private networks (VPNs), software that allows users to jump the Great Firewall and view censored sites. VPNMentor and Top10VPN, two such sites, reported that they had received emails from the American tech giant notifying them of the decision despite having advertised with Google previously.
Why it’s important: Critics say the move highlights Google’s attempts to gain favor with the Chinese government. Last week, China’s market regulator called for internet platforms to intensify their control over ads on the internet. Despite the majority of its consumer-facing services being blocked in China, its ad business is still active and growing in the country. Google said it has policies that prevent ads in its network for private servers in areas where they are illegal. The company has been working on a censored search engine for China, although it claims it has no plans to launch the product.
]]>Trump: Google is committed to US not the Chinese military – BBC News
What happened: US President Donald Trump has said that Google is “committed to the US military, not the Chinese military” following a meeting with the company’s CEO Sundar Pichai. The US leader later added in a tweet that they had discussed “political fairness” as well as what Google could do for the US. Pichai was scheduled to meet General Joseph Dunford, chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest-ranking military advisory committee in the US, to discuss topics that were expected to be related to Google’s work in China. The meeting with the president had not been made public beforehand.
Why it’s important: Trump’s comments come shortly after he said Google was “helping China and their military, but not the US.” His statement echoed Dunford’s sentiments, who made similar remarks days before. Dunford said that Google’s AI Lab in China, which the company opened in Beijing in 2017, benefits the Chinese military. The dispute has arisen because China and the Pentagon are both possible buyers of Google’s services. The company has backed out of cloud computing and drone footage analysis deals with the US military and the Department of Defense. Meanwhile, Google has been developing a censored search engine for the Chinese market.
]]>Chinese automaker Geely will purchase a 50% stake in Daimler’s Smart car division, as the German manufacturer seeks to promote electric vehicles and recover its losses from the flagging micro car business.
In a statement released Thursday, the two companies said they would form a 50-50 globally focused joint venture to “own, operate and further develop Smart … as a leader in premium-electrified vehicles.” The new firm’s board will include an equal number of executives from the Chinese and German companies.
The move comes as Daimler seeks to recoup some of its losses from the Smart brand. According to investment research firm Evercore ISI, Smart has been losing up to €700 million (around $790 million) a year. The joint venture also follows an agreement last year in which the two companies partnered on ride-hailing services to take on industry giant Didi.
Geely owns Swedish vehicle producer Volvo and British sports car maker Lotus. The company bought a $9 billion stake in Daimler at the beginning of 2018.
Geely chairperson Li Shufu said in the statement that the companies plan to “further push the introduction of premium electric products to give a better mobility experience.” The new company will target both the Chinese and international markets.
Daimler and Geely will build a factory in China and expect to sell their small electric cars by 2022. The vehicles will be designed by Mercedes Benz, which is owned by Daimler, and engineered by Geely. Before the launch of the new Smart models, the current generation will continue being produced at Daimler’s plant in France.
Daimler has increased its presence in China over the course of the past few years. The company was granted a license to test autonomous vehicles in Beijing—the first non-Chinese automaker to be given such permissions. Daimler has also forged ties with internet giant Baidu. The two companies signed an agreement last year to deepen a partnership on vehicle connectivity services. As part of the deal, Daimler planned to integrate Baidu’s services into Mercedes Benz’s infotainment system.
]]>Google is conducting a secret “performance review” of its censored China search project – The Intercept
What happened: Top managers at Google are conducting a secretive “performance review” of work on Project Dragonfly—the company’s censored search engine for China, sources have told The Intercept. Typically, work at the company is peer-reviewed, with the results being assessed by management. However, in this case, the normal process has been subverted and the review is being conducted by committees of managers.
Why it’s important: Google is attempting to keep all aspects of its China search project secretive. Should Dragonfly undergo the usual performance assessments, employees across the company would be able to closely scrutinize the project. Following internal backlash Google received after Dragonfly was made public last year, the company is doing what it can avoid further controversy. However, the secretive review process is likely to stoke anger among Google employees, who last year complained about the project’s lack of transparency. According to The Intercept’s sources, Google management have consistently refused to provide employees with more information, contrary to CEO Sundar Pichai’s promise to engage more on the topic going forward.
]]>Google’s AI Work in China Spurs CEO Sitdown With Pentagon Brass – Bloomberg
What happened: Google CEO Sundar Pichai will meet with General Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest-ranking military advisory committee in the US, to discuss topics that will likely include Google’s work in China. The search giant invited Dunford to the meeting after he said that Google’s work in China benefits the Chinese military.
Why it’s important: Dunford previously referenced a Google AI lab that the company opened in China in 2017. US President Donald Trump picked up on the senior military official’s comments, tweeting that Google is “helping China and their military, but not the US.” Google denied the claims. The conflict, which poses a risk to the company’s cloud-computing business, has arisen in part because both China and the Pentagon are potential buyers of Google’s services. The company has tested a filtered search engine for the Chinese market but has also turned down or terminated contracts with the US military and Department of Defense, leading to the accusations that the company is, directly or indirectly, helping China.
]]>China Scales Back Electric-Car Subsidies to Spur Innovation – Bloomberg
What happened: China will cut electric vehicle (EV) subsidies as it aims to spur innovation and counter manufacturer reliance on government assistance to drive sales. China’s Ministry of Finance said in a statement on Tuesday that, among others, subsidies for vehicles with a range of more than 400 kilometers would be cut by half to RMB 25,000 (around $3,700). The ministry is also recommending that provincial and city governments cut their subsidies for EVs.
Why it’s important: Financial assistance for purchases has led to the rapid growth of China’s EV sector. However, this support has also led to concerns that manufacturers are too reliant on the government, which is holding them back from developing better technology and vehicles. The cuts have already had a negative impact on some smaller automakers. Shanghai-based Nio saw its share price fall by more than 5% following the announcement. The company previously said it would not reduce prices to offset lower subsidies, which means a higher price tag for prospective buyers.
]]>China no match for US unicorns in AI, big data and robotics as it continues to play catch-up in R&D, says Credit Suisse – South China Morning Post
What happened: Despite China producing nearly one-third of the world’s startups valued at more than $1 billion, the country’s share of high-tech unicorns is far smaller than that of the US, according to a report by Credit Suisse. The report said that China accounts for just 14% of unicorns in sectors that require advanced research abilities, including artificial intelligence (AI), big data, and robotics, compared to the US with 40%.
Why it’s important: Artificial intelligence and robotics form an important part of China’s technological development plan. The country aims to move up the industrial value chain through its Made in China 2025 initiative and become a leader in AI by 2030. However, according to Credit Suisse, the country is a relative newcomer to the “games of R&D and innovation.” Its report said that nearly half of all Chinese unicorns are internet and e-commerce companies, and the main focus is business model innovation, not new technological products.
]]>China’s Evergrande Health aims to build production capacity for up to 1 million EVs in 3 years – Reuters
What happened: Evergrande Health aims to build production capacity for 1 million electric vehicles (EV) in the next three years. Its parent company, the real estate conglomerate Evergrande Group, said last week that it had plans to begin producing vehicles as early June.
Why it’s important: An ugly breakup with EV startup Faraday Future has further motivated Evergrande in its ambitions to produce electric cars. Amid a broader government push, the company aims to become the world’s largest manufacturer of new energy vehicles (NEVs), including EVs and hybrids, in the next five years. In January, the property juggernaut set up an NEV company with $2 billion in registered capital. Prior to this, it pledged $930 million for a 51% stake in National Electric Vehicle Sweden through Evergrande Health. Evergrande has also invested more than RMB 1 billion (around $150 million) in EV battery manufacturer Shanghai CENAT New Energy.
]]>Investors in electric car manufacturer Nio are taking legal action against the company for deception and alleged violations of US securities laws. They are also saying that the firm made little effort to follow through on its plans to build a production plant in Shanghai.
Multiple law firms have launched investigations into the company for “injuring investors,” following the release of Nio’s fourth-quarter results in early March. The law firms said that reports of a greater than expected slowdown in Nio deliveries led the company’s stock price to fall by nearly 20%, thereby resulting in losses for investors.
Nio was not immediately available for comment.
A class action lawsuit has also been filed on behalf of investors, though it is yet to be certified. Los Angeles-based Schall Law Firm said in a release the damages were a result of Nio making false or misleading statements, including those relating to its now-defunct factory plans.
“Nio made no effort to build a manufacturing facility for its electric vehicles, instead relying on an obscure manufacturer owned by the Chinese government, JAC Auto, to build its products,” the law firm said.
Nio recently abandoned plans to build a manufacturing plant in Shanghai, opting instead to focus on “joint manufacturing” in the long term. The company’s vehicles are currently produced in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei by JAC. Nio is required to pay the auto manufacturer for every car built. Nio previously planned to complete construction on its Shanghai plant by the end of 2020.
Industry sources told TechNode earlier this month that China’s top economic planning agency blocked Nio from building the factory to enforce new rules aimed at combating overcapacity in the auto sector.
According to its listing documents, Nio is also required to compensate JAC for any operating losses it incursduring the first three years of production. By the end of June 2018, the company had paid JAC RMB 65 million (around $10 million) for the auto manufacturer’s 2018 second-quarter losses.
Nio expects its slowdown to continue, projecting that deliveries of its ES8 SUV will fall by more than 50% compared to the previous quarter, according to its latest financial results.
]]>A Didi driver has allegedly been murdered by a passenger in the central Chinese city of Changde, once again drawing attention to safety standards on the ride-hailing platform.
The incident occurred early Sunday morning when a 19-year-old suspect stabbed the driver, surnamed Chen, before disembarking, according to law enforcement in the city.
Police said that the suspect turned himself in shortly after committing the crime.
“We have formed an emergency response team to fully cooperate with police while sending representatives to visit the family of the vicitim,” Didi said in a Weibo announcement (in Chinese). A Didi spokesperson told TechNode that the driver worked for the company’s Express service.
The incident follows Didi’s increased focus on safety after it experienced public outcry and government censure after two passengers were killed by their drivers on separate occasions last year. Those occurrences took place on Didi’s carpooling platform Hitch, which has subsequently been halted indefinitely.
This is not the first time a Didi driver has been killed by a passenger. In 2017, a driver surnamed Ao was killed by 22-year-old passenger Li Qingbing in Foshan, a city in the southern province of Guangdong. Li later appeared in court and pleaded guilty to the crime. A year later, another driver was killed in Guizhou province after being robbed of more than RMB 2,000 (around $300). His body was later found under a bridge.
Didi has implemented a number of safety upgrades, including a panic button for passengers and a driver-passenger blacklisting function. According to an announcement last week, nearly 140 million people have added an emergency contact to their Didi app. However, most of the focus has fallen on passenger safety.
Additional reporting by Jill Shen.
]]>Faraday Future just sold its headquarters to help keep the company alive – The Verge
What happened: Embattled electric car startup Faraday Future has sold its headquarters in Los Angeles in an attempt to refill its bank account. Faraday reportedly sold the property for around $10 million, though the figure could be higher given the company took out a $17 million loan against its headquarters in May last year. Faraday bought the property in 2014 for $13 million.
Why it’s important: The sale is the latest in a series of moves aimed at keeping Faraday afloat following an investment dispute with Chinese real estate conglomerate Evergrande. The investor backed out of a $2 billion deal at the end of 2018, while Faraday has sought alternative shareholders. On March 14, Faraday announced that it was putting a 400-acre property in Las Vegas up for sale for $40 million. The site was originally earmarked for a manufacturing plant. Faraday’s cash crunch also resulted in it not bringing back hundreds of furloughed employees in early March. The company hasn’t been able to start production, save for a few prototypes, as a result of its clash with Evergrande.
]]>Chinese AI start-up Megvii said to plan IPO in either Hong Kong or New York to raise up to US$800 million – South China Morning Post
What happened: Artificial intelligence startup Megvii is reportedly looking to raise up to $800 million in an initial public offering (IPO) as early as June this year, though the company has not decided whether to go public in Hong Kong or New York. Megvii provides its computer vision technologies to companies including Foxconn, Ant Financial, Lenovo, and Xiaomi. It is also used by China’s public security organs, contributing to the arrests of more than 5,000 people since 2016.
Why it’s important: China is home to the largest number of AI unicorns in the world, with various facial recognition firms seeking IPOs this year. Megvii’s listing could serve as a litmus test for those thinking about following the company to the capital markets. Meanwhile, China hopes to become a leader in AI by 2030 through a variety of applications, from healthcare to public security and autonomous vehicles.
]]>Stanford University launches the Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence – Stanford University News
What happened: Former head of Google AI’s China Center Li Feifei will lead Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence with the university’s former provost John Etchemendy. The institute aims to advance AI research, education, and policy in order to “improve the human condition.” It will focus on the societal impact of AI and designing applications to augment human capabilities, among others.
Why it’s important: The move comes amid broader concerns over the effects of AI on society. Li has been grappling with these concepts for some time. In early 2018, she wrote an op-ed for the New York Times in which she expressed her concern that enthusiasm for the technology is preventing a level-headed look at its effects on society. Leaders of some of China’s biggest tech companies have expressed similar opinions. At the Two Sessions, China’s annual meetings of its national legislative and political advisory bodies, Baidu CEO Robin Li and Tencent head Pony Ma called for ethical rules governing the development of AI. Robin Li also asked the government to participate in the global conversation about AI ethics.
]]>Earlier this month, Dutch cybersecurity researcher Victor Gevers happened upon a trove of Chinese social media records—364 million of them, to be precise.
The data had been siphoned off popular messaging platforms WeChat and QQ, as well as e-commerce giant Taobao’s merchant-customer communications system Wangwang, among others.
The records, which came mainly from internet cafe users from within China, included chat logs, locations, ID numbers, locations, and file transfers. Once collected, the information was sent to multiple servers around the country for processing and investigation by police, according to Gevers. It is unclear whether the databases were set up by law enforcement.
The incident highlights a fundamental weakness in cybersecurity in China and throws light on the relationship between government bodies and tech companies, the nature of which is haphazard and weak and puts the data of Chinese internet users at risk. In the wrong hands, data can be used for a whole host of nefarious activities.
“If you have a lot of people’s data leaked there is an increased probability of there being identity theft, financial fraud, and if it becomes large enough, it could even become a financial stability issue,” explained Martin Chorzempa, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, based in Washington, D.C.
As part of China’s mass surveillance program, the Chinese government outsources supervision of online services and monitoring mechanisms to private companies, many of which pay scant attention to netizens’ data privacy.
Private companies are eagerly selling surveillance tech to the Chinese state, with few qualms about the effect they have on society, Maya Wang, senior research fellow on China at Human Rights Watch, told TechNode in an email.
The result is that, contrary to popular descriptions of China’s highly effective all-seeing state, in some cases, the data-gathering systems are pieced together like a patchwork made up of ill-fitting and poorly matching pieces of cloth. It is a surveillance system that is easily tampered with and in which data is mismanaged.
Gevers refers to the social media surveillance program as a “jerry-rigged PRISM,” referencing the US’s once-clandestine data collection program that former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden exposed in 2013.
The discovery by Gevers came a month after the researcher found a database containing the ID and location data of more than 2.5 million people in the northwestern province of Xinjiang. The database belonged to Sensenets Technology, a Shenzhen-based facial recognition company that works with Chinese police in cities around China. The company previously claimed to have a partnership with Microsoft (see cached site here). The US tech giant has subsequently denied the affiliation and Sensenets has removed reference to it on its website. As with the social media trove, Sensenets’ database was left exposed for anyone to access. It has since been secured.
To grasp how the internet cafe leaks happened, it’s important to understand the rules under which the cafes operated. These internet cafes are required to register their customers, while keeping track of their online activities. Regulations demand that internet cafes retain records for at least 60 days. Authorities also compel internet cafes to install monitoring software on computers. Should the police come knocking, businesses are required to provide this data to the government.
“It’s mandatory,” Li Peng, an employee at an internet cafe in northern Shanghai, told TechNode. “If you want to come to an internet cafe, you have to bring your ID or driver’s license.” Unsurprisingly, a number of companies have used these rules to generate profit.
China’s private sector is increasingly seeking to benefit from the country’s domestic security apparatus. And no wonder—it’s an increasingly lucrative business. Government spending in the sector amounted to 6.1% of the country’s total budget in 2017, totaling RMB 1.24 trillion ($185 billion)—more than the RMB 1.02 trillion spent on the military.
Headbond.com is one such company. Headquartered in the eastern Chinese province of Shandong, it provides a management system for internet cafes that handles everything from payments to real-name registration services to monitoring.
The company’s system was one of those that was linked to the open social media database.
Headbond has received at least one contract from the government. In 2017, police in the eastern Chinese city of Yancheng paid it nearly RMB 100,000 to provide its monitoring systems in the city (in Chinese). Headbond did not respond to TechNode’s request for comment.
A slew of other companies also offers similar services. While not involved in the latest breach, Sicent, based in the southwestern city of Chengdu, claims it “frees internet cafe owners from complicated management work,” according to the company’s website. TechNode found dozens of similar applications, though it is unclear how widely some are used.
The Sensenets and social media databases were all of a type called MongoDB, an open-source platform for storing data, which is unsecured by default. Newer versions of the software address this issue, but owners are required to change settings to make them secure.
Yu Xinyu, a Shanghai-based security expert at Huawei, told TechNode that some of the leaks were due to lack of ability among those maintaining the databases and that information security in China is weak overall. He said many companies “do not know the concept of a security baseline.”
“People have no idea what they are doing; it’s incompetence,” Gevers said.
This extends to local governments. For city and provincial authorities, there is a strong incentive to appear technologically advanced and spend enormous amounts on surveillance systems, many of which end up not working, Chorzempa said.
Shortly before Gevers, who works at Dutch cybersecurity nonprofit GDI Foundation, discovered the open social media databases, China’s National Computer Network Emergency Response Technical Team, a cybersecurity center affiliated with the government, highlighted issues with MongoDB databases. The organization said it had found nearly 500 open instances of this sort and was working with authorities to secure them, while also drawing attention to the role that the unsecured default mode played in the database being left open.
It’s unclear what the repercussions will be for the authorities that started the surveillance program and for companies like Sensenets and Headbond. According to Leon Liu, a partner at Shanghai-based MWE China Law Offices, the government requires major data breaches to be reported.
“More than just caring about the data privacy leakage, the Chinese government also cares about the possible damage to national security or social stability,” Liu told TechNode.
]]>Google denies working with the Chinese military after Trump criticism – NBC News
What happened: Google has denied claims it is working with the Chinese military following public criticism from US President Donald Trump, who tweeted on Sunday that the company is “helping China and their military, but not the US.” Trump’s remarks came just days after Joseph Dunford, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest-ranking military advisory committee in the US, testified before Congress that China is benefiting from Google’s involvement in the country.
Why it’s important: Trump’s comments highlight a sore point. He obviously views Google as not having fallen in line with his “America first” rhetoric. The company has opted to drop a contract to help the US military analyze aerial drone footage. It has also said it would no longer pursue a $10 billion cloud computing deal with the Department of Defense, saying its ethical guidelines aren’t aligned with the project. Meanwhile, Google has been exploring a China-focused search product dubbed “Project Dragonfly.” The company says it has no plans to launch the search engine, although work seems to be ongoing, as Google eyes the world’s largest internet population.
]]>Google’s work in China benefiting China’s military: U.S. general – Reuters
What happened: The Chinese military is benefiting from Google’s work in the country, according to Joseph Dunford, marine general and chairperson of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest-ranking military advisory committee in the US. He said that the panel is watching with “great concern” as US companies work in China while knowing that the country gains from their presence.
Why it’s important: Google has invested in China for years and will continue to do so, according to the company’s CEO Sundar Pichai. News broke last year that Google had been working on a search product for the Chinese market, though research has supposedly been put on hold. The program, dubbed Dragonfly, sparked dissent among Google employees and concern from US lawmakers, who said that for the company to offer the service in China, it would have to comply with the country’s censorship and surveillance policies. Meanwhile, Google has opted to drop contracts with the US military to help them analyze aerial drone footage. Google also said it would no longer pursue a $10 billion cloud computing deal with the US Department of Defense, as its ethical guidelines do not align with the project.
]]>Japanese conglomerate Softbank will invest an additional $1.6 billion in Didi, according to the company’s CEO. The move comes amid reports of the ride-hailing giant’s record losses in 2018.
“We’re investing $1.6 billion … as the additional investment to our earlier rounds,” Softbank CEO and founder Masayoshi Son said of Didi during an interview with CNBC on March 8. He did not specify whether the investment would come from Softbank or its venture capital arm Vision Fund.
Son said that companies in the ride-hailing industry are “growing so quickly,” while acknowledging that they had not yet made a profit.
A Didi spokesperson declined to comment on the latest investment pledge by Softbank when contacted by TechNode.
Softbank previously took part in a $4.5 billion funding round in Didi in 2016. It was also involved in a $5.5 billion round in the ride-hailing firm in 2017, alongside China Merchants Bank and the Bank of Communications, according to data from Crunchbase.
The Softbank announcement comes amid mounting financial and regulatory challenges for Didi. The company reportedly made a loss of nearly RMB 11 billion (around $1.6 billion) in 2018 as it shifted its focus from revenue to compliance following the murder of two passengers using its carpooling service.
Didi this year plans to lay off 2,000 of its employees, amounting to 15% of its workforce. During an internal meeting in February, Didi CEO Cheng Wei said some non-core businesses would be re-evaluated and cut back if necessary. The company plans to make additional hires to focus on compliance, driver management, and internationalization.
In September, Cheng said in an internal letter that the company had “never achieved profitability” since its founding.
Didi has faced public outcry and government scrutiny following the murders on its Hitch carpooling service, which has been suspended indefinitely. The company has been working to remove non-compliant cars and drivers from its network. As a result, Didi has had to commit additional capital to recruit qualified drivers and devote more resources to safety, both of which have had an impact on its finances.
]]>Baidu, Chery launch electric car with face-scanning payment, AR navigation features – South China Morning Post
What happened: Search giant Baidu has launched a production model electric vehicle (EV) with car manufacturer Chery Automotive, featuring an AI operating system that supports facial recognition payments, augmented reality navigation, and control of home devices while in transit. It also provides personalizations such as driver-specific greetings and automatic seat and light adjustments.
Why it’s important: Chery is looking to attract younger customers by incorporating more advanced technologies into its products, while Baidu accelerates its involvement in the auto sector amid slowing search advertising revenue. The search giant is already well known for its Apollo autonomous driving system and has been named one of China’s AI Champions by the government. It has also increased its investments in electric vehicle startups, most recently leading a $450 million funding round in WM Motor. The company previously invested in Shanghai-based EV maker Nio.
]]>China’s top economic planning agency has blocked homegrown electric vehicle maker Nio from building its own manufacturing facility in Shanghai, as enforcement of new rules aimed at curbing overcapacity in the auto sector kick in.
The decision not to allow Nio to follow through on previously announced plans to build its own car factory in Shanghai effectively means Nio may have to wait in line until rival Tesla’s plant in the city reaches capacity.
An industry source told TechNode that the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) stopped Shanghai authorities from approving the plant. The city will have to wait until Tesla, which recently began construction on its own factory in Shanghai, has reached production capacity before it can approve other manufacturing sites, according to the source.
Another source at a rival EV company also alluded to the government’s influence on the fate of Nio’s plant.
A Nio spokesperson told TechNode that the company has halted its construction plans as it can increase production capacity with its current manufacturing partner with relatively little investment. The company added that the government has allowed companies like itself to apply for relevant permits through existing manufacturers.
In its financial results released earlier this week, Nio said it had decided to terminate plans for its Shanghai plant, adding that it was instead opting to focus on “joint manufacturing” in the long term. Nio CEO William Li said in an earnings call that the cooperative mode is endorsed by the Chinese government.
Nio’s stock price had fallen by around 30% as of the close of markets on Thursday following the release of its latest earnings earlier in the week.
Tesla broke ground on its plant in January, with four main workshops to be completed by September and its power system workshop is expected to be finished by March 2020. As a result, it will likely be a matter of years before Nio gets approval to build a Shanghai-based factory. Tesla said on Thursday that it had secured a $500 million loan from Chinese lenders to fund the plant.
China is the largest automotive market in the world, despite a recent slowdown. The country has highlighted the EV sector’s crucial role in developing the economy by including it in its Made in China 2025 industrial plan. Apart from Nio, companies including Byton, Xiaopeng, and WM Motor, among others, are looking to make gains in the industry. Byton hopes to open its factory in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing in May.
New regulations governing China’s automotive sector, which came into effect in January, show that the government is determined to combat overcapacity and phase out cars that use fossil fuels.
The NDRC said it would not approve any new independent companies wishing to build regular vehicles that use internal combustion engines while promoting the “healthy” development of new energy vehicles, which include hybrids and EVs.
The government is also encouraging partnerships between companies working on vehicle research and development and manufacturers with existing plants, aiming to use capacity at already built factories rather than constructing new ones, in a move that combats industry glut.
Nio’s EVs are currently produced in partnership with state-owned auto manufacturer JAC Motors in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei. Nio previously hoped to finish construction of its own site in Shanghai’s Jiading District by the end of 2020.
Some analysts TechNode spoke to believe the move has less to do with regulatory issues and more to do with Nio’s cash flow constraints and its struggle to sell cars. Its manufacturing costs can’t be helping: According to documents submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission before Nio’s IPO, the company pays JAC for each vehicle produced at its plant.
At the time of the filing, Nio had begun delivering its flagship SUV, the ES8. The company said it could enter into similar manufacturing agreements for other vehicles. Since going public, Nio has launched another vehicle, the ES6.
“It costs them money to produce at JAC, and they would definitely prefer to control their own production process,” the industry source said.
The company has agreed to compensate JAC for any operating losses it incurs during the first three years of production. As of the end of June, the company had paid JAC RMB 65 million (around $10 million) for losses during the second quarter of 2018, according to Nio’s IPO filing.
Nio made losses of $1.4 billion in 2018, despite revenues of $720 million. The company expects its deliveries to witness a quarterly drop of more than 50% in the first few months of 2019, attributing the decline to macroeconomic factors, accelerated deliveries before subsidy reductions in 2019, and seasonal holidays. Nio predicts that the slowdown will continue into the second quarter.
]]>Electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Nio has abandoned plans to build a manufacturing plant in Shanghai, while reporting losses of $1.4 billion in 2018.
The company said on Tuesday that it would focus on the “joint manufacturing model in the long-term.” Nio’s vehicles are currently produced in partnership with state-owned JAC Motors in the eastern Chinese city of Hefei, which the company claims will support its growth plans for the next two to three years. The Shanghai-based EV firm previously expected to finish construction on its own factory in Shanghai’s Jiading District by the end of 2020.
The company did not elaborate when reached for further comment by TechNode.
Nio made the announcement in its latest financial results. The EV manufacturer reached revenues of $720 million for the financial year, although its losses almost doubled compared to 2017.
Nio said it experienced a “greater than anticipated slowdown” during the first two months this year. The company expects this to continue, with projections that first-quarter deliveries of its flagship ES8 SUV will fall by more than 50% compared to the previous quarter. Aside from the ES8, the company launched a more budget-friendly SUV, the ES6, in December.
Nio, which went public on the New York Stock Exchange in September, currently does not have an electric vehicle manufacturing license. In its listing documents, the firm said it hoped the plant would increase its chances of acquiring the permit.
Nio abandoning its Shanghai factory comes as competition in the electric vehicle industry heats up. US EV manufacturer Tesla last week slashed the prices its vehicles, with variants of its Model X seeing a RMB 341,100 (around $51,000) price cut. Meanwhile, the US company is building its first overseas manufacturing plant in Shanghai.
Nio’s ES8 has been touted as a competitor to the Model X. However, Nio also lacks Tesla’s brand image, a shortcoming the Shanghai-based company acknowledged in its IPO filing, saying that it faces significant challenges as a new entrant to the industry.
Correction: This article has been corrected to reflect that Nio’s revenues were $720 million for the financial year and not $702 million as previously reported.
]]>Google employees uncover ongoing work on censored China search – The Intercept
What happened: Google employees have identified ongoing work on a batch of code associated with the company’s controversial project aimed at developing a censored search engine for China, despite management moving engineers away from the project last year. The group of employees launched an investigation in response to a dissatisfying a lack of communication from the search giant’s leadership about the project.
Why it’s important: Dubbed Dragonfly, the project was subject to outcry last year as employees expressed concern that the Chinese government would require Google to censor search results should the company choose to launch the search engine. Following complaints from Google’s privacy team, developers lost access to data from Beijing-based website 265.com, which they were using to learn about Chinese search habits and develop blacklists to comply with Chinese regulations, effectively ending the project. Despite this, the allure of the Chinese market has seemingly continued to woo Google executives including CEO Sundar Pichai, who in December claimed before US lawmakers that the company was exploring the idea, though it had no plans to relaunch its search business in China.
]]>The Shanghai Stock Exchange released a finalized set of regulations late last week for its new tech board, expanding upon the draft introduced on Jan. 30.
“Red-chip companies”—China-based firms incorporated and listed outside the mainland, especially in Hong Kong—with rapid growth, self-developed and cutting-edge technologies, and competitive advantages in its segment are allowed to list on the new tech board, according to the new regulations.
The rules also provide a number of other standards for firms that wish to go public on the new board, stating that companies need to meet at least one to qualify.
The loosest standards include an expected market capitalization of no less than RMB 1 billion (around $150 million), positive net profit margins in the two years prior to listing, and a total net profit margin of no less than RMB 50 million (around $7.5 million) during the same period.
Companies with a market capitalization of no less than RMB 1 billion, positive net profit margin over the past year, and revenue of no less than RMB 100 million (around $15 million) during the same period are also qualified to apply.
Also eligible to list are companies with an expected market capitalization of no less than RMB 1.5 billion (around $224 million), revenue of no less than RMB 200 million (around $30 million), and a total R&D expense of no less than 15% of their total revenue over the past three years.
Chinese President Xi Jinping first announced the board, which is seen as China’s answer to the tech-focused Nasdaq, during a trade expo in Shanghai last year. The move is aimed at implementing policies to make China a more attractive place for the country’s tech startups to go public. Officials hope for it to provide an alternative to international bourses like the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq.
The board also aims to boost China’s technical know-how by giving promising, but potentially loss-making firms, access to additional capital. The move falls in line with the country’s ambitions to become a tech powerhouse by 2030 through a focus on artificial intelligence and higher-value manufacturing industries.
With contributions from Chris Udemans
]]>China’s tech billionaires back ethical rules to guide development of AI and other technologies – South China Morning Post
What happened: The CEOs of two of China’s biggest tech companies have stressed the importance of rules governing the ethical development of artificial intelligence (AI). Baidu’s Robin Li and Tencent’s Pony Ma submitted separate proposals to China’s “Two Sessions,” an annual gathering of the country’s lawmakers and political advisors, calling for officials to emphasize ethics in AI innovation. Li urged the government to consult experts in the field and called for China to participate in the global dialogue on emerging rules governing the technology.
Why it’s important: The Chinese government is betting on technological innovation, including that afforded by artificial intelligence, to drive the country’s economy. Companies have been adopting AI in ever-increasing ways, including product recommendations, news aggregation, and surveillance, bringing the emerging technology into the spotlight. Li said that AI’s rapid development has sparked concerns among the public. Regardless, its proliferation will continue as China pushes to reach its goal of becoming a leader in AI by 2030, while simultaneously increasing its focus on high-tech industries through its Made in China 2025 initiative.
]]>China to open 400 big data, AI majors in universities for global competition – People’s Daily
What happened: China will form around 400 new majors relating to artificial intelligence, robotics, and big data at universities around the country in 2019. According to Fan Hailin, a deputy director at the Department of Higher Education, the curriculum for the newly established majors will include “computer application technology, information and communication, [and] control science and engineering.” The Ministry of Education also plans to continue promoting online courses during the year.
Why it’s important: China has set out ambitious plans to become an artificial intelligence powerhouse in the next ten years, with eyes on transforming itself into a world leader in the technology by 2030. As a result, a number of the country’s universities have set up AI departments. Despite this, China is still experiencing a talent crunch, in which the country’s goals could be hampered by a lack of AI knowledge among its workforce. The renewed efforts could also be in vain should China be unable to retain its top graduates. According to a recent study, only around 31% of graduates from China’s top machine learning universities remain in the country, while 62% leave for the US.
]]>Chinese real estate giant Evergrande has set up a new energy vehicle company with four wholly owned subsidiaries, the latest in a series of moves that sees the company increase its focus on electric cars.
Evergrande New Energy Vehicle Company was established in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou on Jan. 25 with a registered capital of $2 billion, according to public records. A month later, it changed its name to Evergrande National New Energy Vehicle Group. The company will focus on energy technology research, engineering, and the sale of auto parts.
Prior to setting up its own new EV firm, Evergrande invested in US-based electric car startup Faraday Future. However, the deal led to a months-long spat as Faraday sought an advance on an installment that made up part of Evergrande’s investment. The company refused, later canceling the deal and allowing Faraday to seek investment elsewhere.
Since then, Evergrande has shown resolve in increasing its involvement in the electric vehicle industry. In January, Evergrande pledged $930 million through its subsidiary Evergrande Health for a 51% stake in National Electric Vehicle Sweden (NEVS), a Chinese consortium owned by the municipality of Tianjin, a city in northern China. Later that month, Evergrande invested more than RMB 1 billion (around $150 million) for a 58% holding in electric vehicle battery manufacturer Shanghai CENAT New Energy.
New energy vehicles form an important part of the Made in China 2025 initiative, a broad plan to move the country up the industrial value chain. The industry has seen increasing growth, in part, due to government subsidies. Sales of EVs increased by more than 60% last year to reach over 1.2 million. That number is expected to reach 1.6 million in 2019.
]]>Faraday Future says hundreds of furloughed employees won’t return to work next week – The Verge
What happened: Hundreds of Faraday Future employees who were placed on furlough in December won’t return to work on March 1, according to an internal email obtained by The Verge. The workers were put on unpaid leave following a series of pay cuts and layoffs last year.
Why it’s important: Faraday was embroiled in a months-long dispute with Chinese real estate company Evergrande, the electric vehicle manufacturer’s largest outside shareholder. The spat came after Faraday asked the Chinese firm for an advance on a future installment that formed part of Evergrande’s investment. Evergrande refused, but the two companies came to an agreement in January, in which Evergrande terminated the deal and permitted Faraday to look for new investors, though it still holds a non-controlling stake in the electric vehicle startup. A number of executives, including co-founder Nick Sampson, left the company in the midst of the dispute. However, Faraday hasn’t been able to secure further investment, exacerbating its cash crunch and delaying its plans to bring back furloughed employees.
]]>What happened: Artificial intelligence (AI) chip designer Horizon Robotics has raised a massive $600 million in its latest round of funding. The round was led by SK, a South Korean conglomerate, memory chipmaker SK Hynix, and a number of venture capital funds backed by Chinese auto manufacturers. The investment now values Beijing-based Horizon Robotics at $3 billion, according to the company.
Why it’s important: Backed by private and state funds, China’s AI chip industry is witnessing a boom. Earlier this week, chipmaker Nationalchip announced a RMB 150 million investment led by a fund under the State Development & Investment Corp, which is backed by the Ministry of Finance. China seeks to temper its reliance on foreign-made technology, especially semiconductors. President Xi Jinping has called for self-sufficiency as part of a broad plan aimed at moving China up the industrial value chain. AI is of particular significance. The State Council, China’s cabinet, has set a goal of becoming a world leader in the technology by 2030.
Ride-hailing platform Didi is cutting employee perks as it seeks to limit internal spending, a move that comes shortly after the company’s CEO announced plans to lay off around 2,000 employees.
Didi is slashing meal subsidies at its cafeterias, while increasing the prices of some goods. In addition, gym benefits and late-night snacks have been canceled, and funding for staff clubs is being cut. Workspaces at the company are also being made smaller. The policy came into effect on Monday.
News of the cuts began circulating on Chinese media over the weekend, detailing the extent of the reductions in a screenshot of a document that was sent to employees. In the internal memo, the company said the new policy is being implemented to “better save on internal expenses.”
A Didi spokesperson confirmed that the company had recently “made adjustments” to its employee perks, adding that it has “no plans to make any major cuts.”
The cutbacks come shortly after Didi CEO Cheng Wei told employees in an internal meeting that the company this year intends to lay off 15% of its workforce, amounting to around 2,000 people. Cheng said that the layoffs were a result of a reorganization plan announced in December and a performance review. He also said that Didi intends to an additional 2,500 employees in 2019 to focus on safety, compliance, offline driver management, and internationalization.
The news followed rumors that Didi lost nearly RMB 11 billion in 2018. In September, Cheng said that the company had “never achieved profitability.” Three months later, the company slashed its employees’ year-end bonuses in half, citing the firm’s poor performance in 2018.
According to Chinese media, Didi is offering generous severance packages, amounting to an employee’s annual income divided by 12 plus two months’ salary. Anonymous Didi employees posted on Chinese professional networking platform Maimai that “everyone wants to be fired after they became aware of the scheme.” The posts were widely shared on microblogging platform Weibo.
Didi has faced increased scrutiny following incidents in which two female passengers were murdered by their drivers while using the company’s carpooling platform Hitch. One of the two drivers was sentenced to death in early February, while the body of the other alleged murderer was found in a river following the incident.
An investigation by Chinese authorities at the company’s headquarters found that Didi’s Hitch service had “serious safety hazards.” The service has been suspended indefinitely.
]]>China steps up investment in AI chips with funding for Hangzhou Nationalchip – SCMP
What happened: A fund under one of China’s largest state-owned investment holding companies has invested RMB 150 million (around $22 million) in Nationalchip, a chipmaker based in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou. The fund—under the State Development and Investment Corp (SDIC) and whom the Ministry of Finance is a major stakeholder—led the Series B. Venture capital firm Sinovation Ventures, founded by former Google China head Lee Kai-fu, also took part in the funding round.
Why it’s important: Nationalchip makes chips for set-top boxes and has expanded into manufacturing AI chips. The company intends to use the extra cash for research relating to algorithm and chip design, among others, and to accelerate the development of new products. The investment highlights China’s ambition to become less dependence on foreign-made technology. Chinese companies are showing increasing interest in developing the AI chip market in China. Last year, Beijing-based Cambricon raised millions of dollars in its Series B, valuing the company at $2.5 billion. Other players include Horizon Robotics, Bitmain, and Rokid.
]]>China is using facial recognition technology to crack down on hospital scalpers in the country’s capital, as authorities seek to eliminate the illegal sale of medical appointments at inflated prices.
The Beijing Municipal Health Commission (BMHC) said that 30 hospitals in the capital city had collected the facial data of more than 2,000 people who had been punished for booking and selling medical appointments in bulk, reports the Beijing Daily (in Chinese).
Scalpers sell appointments at inflated rates to hospital goers hoping to skip queues, which in turn can result in longer waits for those who can’t afford their prices. Around 900 hospital touts were arrested in Beijing last year as part of a citywide crackdown.
The facial recognition system uses visual data, which is tied to identifying information, to flag suspected scalpers for monitoring when they enter one of the city’s hospitals. Individuals who are found to be selling medical appointments could face detention and restrictions, including bans from some forms of train air travel, and talking out loans.
In an effort to crack down on scalping, hospitals have also released their own apps, which allow users to make an appointment ahead of time, thereby reducing waits in queues and eliminating the need for paying more to skip long lines. Bookings can also be made through Alibaba-backed payment platform Alipay and popular messaging app WeChat, among others.
Facial recognition has become commonplace in China. The country’s private enterprises have led the charge in its development. Social media and gaming giant Tencent uses it to cut down on the amount of time China’s youth spend gaming, Alipay has incorporated it into its payment system, while China’s metros seek to use the technology following their adoption of QR codes to pay for commutes. The technology has also famously been used to spot fugitives at large public events.
]]>Search giant Baidu has faced mounting challenges to its consumer-facing businesses, as the Chinese government cracks down on online content and trust in its search and aggregation services among consumers wanes.
Nonetheless, the company on Friday reported solid revenue growth in the fourth quarter, while net income fell 50% year-on-year as the company sought to expand its content, artificial intelligence, and cloud computing offerings.
Total revenue reached more than RMB 27 billion (around $4 billion) during the quarter, up 22% year-on-year, but slowed compared with the same period last year.
Operating income slid 77% as the company increased spending on content, which included shows and films on video-streaming site iQiyi. Other expenses included those related to research and development, traffic acquisition, and promotional activities—including its “red envelope,” or hongbao, campaign over Chinese New Year.
“The diversification of Baidu’s business from mobile internet to the smart home, smart transportation, cloud, and autonomous driving markets will require heavy investments,” Baidu CFO Herman Yu said in a statement.
These investments, along with slowing quarterly growth in Baidu’s online marketing business, represent a broader turn from the consumer market as the Chinese economy sees its most significant slowdown in nearly 30 years. Rivals Tencent and Alibaba have also increased their focus on enterprise, while all three companies have restructured to counter challenges in the consumer sector—including increased regulation and competition in the content market.
In a note following Baidu’s earnings, Bernstein analyst David Dai listed declining users of the company’s search platform and advertisers migrating away from search, among others, as possible loss-making risks.
“We have entered a new stage in China’s internet where the population and penetration dividend has gone,” Baidu CEO Robin Li said during an earnings call on Friday.
In December, Li announced plans to restructure Baidu, upgrading its Artificial Intelligence and Cloud Computing Unit into a business group, as the company seeks to increase its focus on enterprise customers.
Following the move, Li told employees in an internal memo that the Chinese economy had “shifted to a lower gear,” and that the country’s firms were under “severe pressure from nationwide economic restructuring.” Li called for Baidu employees to decrease costs and improve efficiency for its business clients.
While the opportunity to pivot to enterprise-facing applications was always there, Chinese tech companies have been given an extra incentive following the slowdown in consumer spending, analysts told TechNode.
To boost revenue, company executives have been looking to deploy Baidu’s AI technologies beyond its consumer-facing search, feed, and smart assistant businesses to enterprise and government-led initiatives—including intelligent transportation and smart city projects. Baidu has already partnered with the municipal governments in Shanghai and Xiong’an, in the northern province of Hebei, among others, to provide their AI and cloud computing services to increase efficiency within urban areas.
“With the support of local governments, we see commercial opportunities to minimize traffic congestion, reduce pollution, and improving road safety,” Li said on the earnings call.
The company is also focused on self-driving vehicles. In 2018, China’s central government named Baidu one of five Chinese “AI Champions,” tasking it with spearheading the country’s autonomous driving development. In January, Baidu released a significant update to its self-driving platform, Apollo, enabling autonomous vehicles to navigate “complex urban and suburban environments.” At the same time, it also unveiled its Apollo Enterprise platform, designed for AVs that have been pegged for mass production.
Its Apollo program has been granted over 50 licenses for road testing in Chinese cities, including Beijing, Tianjin, and Chongqing. This year Baidu will roll out a fleet of robotaxis in the central Chinese city of Changsha.
China’s internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), has targeted online service providers as part of a broad crackdown on “vulgar” content. The move has prompted Chinese tech companies to employ legions of moderators that they attempted to keep up with increasingly strict regulations.
Baidu hasn’t been immune to the campaign. Last month, the company said it had removed more than 50 billion “harmful” pieces of information in 2018, up 11% compared to the previous year. Baidu said the removals included content relating to pornography, drug use, gambling, and fraud. According to an annual content management report, the company intercepted 1,500 pieces of information per second.
But it wasn’t enough to appease regulators. In the same month, the CAC ordered Baidu, along with Sohu, to suspend a number of their news services for a week as part of a six-month campaign to clean up the Chinese internet. The company and the regulator didn’t provide further details.
Baidu has also faced scrutiny for its ad placement, leading to waning trust in the company’s search results following a 2016 incident in which a 21-year-old college student died of cancer due to ineffective treatment he had found through ads in Baidu search results.
This was followed by a similar incident last year. An internet user from Shanghai was directed to what she thought was the reputable Fudan University hospital through Baidu’s search results. She underwent an operation that cost tens of thousands of RMB at a similarly named institution. Following the procedure, she found her ailment could have been cured by medication costing RMB 200.
“I would see public sentiment as the biggest challenge Baidu faces,” International Data Corporation research manager Xue Yu told TechNode in an email, adding that difficulty in acquiring new users has increased the company’s traffic acquisition costs. “The negative impression of Baidu’s brand is still a major concern when people use apps,” he said.
The company was again subject to censure in January after it was accused of promoting its own results and low-quality articles on its content aggregator Baijiahao by Chinese journalist Fang Kecheng.
“Baidu no longer plans on being a good search engine. It only wants to be a marketing platform,” Fang wrote in an article. Baidu responded by saying that it would continue to improve its search results and content aggregator. The company also said just 10% of its results come from Baijiahao.
]]>China Has Abandoned a Cybersecurity Truce With the U.S., Report Says – Bloomberg
What happened: China has largely abandoned an Obama-era hacking truce with the US. The agreement led to a slowdown in Chinese hacking in 2015, but the effects of the truce have been reversed, according to cybersecurity firm Crowdstrike, which recently released a report reviewing US rivals’ cyber activity. A representative from the company said that hacking activity resumed in 2017, and reached a peak in 2018. Crowdstrike expects the heightened activity to continue.
Why it’s important: The report comes as the US and China seek to reach a trade deal ahead of a Mar. 1 deadline. Chinese hackers targets included telecommunications infrastructure, currently a sensitive issue as the US and its allies attempt to limit the deployment of Chinese-made 5G equipment. Huawei has borne the brunt of the increased scrutiny for its alleged ties to the Chinese government, prompting concerns over the security of its infrastructure.
]]>2019 Autonomous Vehicles Readiness Index – KPMG
What happened: China ranks 20th in an autonomous vehicle (AV) readiness report by professional services company KPMG, which aims to determine how prepared 25 countries are for self-driving cars. According to the report, while Chinese authorities allow companies to innovate before intervening with regulation, the country has shown only relative improvements in technology, innovation, and infrastructure since last year. Individual measures for each of these metrics are disappointing: The country ranked 19th for its technology and 18th for infrastructure.
Why it’s important: According to the report, the environment for testing innovative technologies in China is “easier” than in other parts of the world. Despite this, and the large number of autonomous driving companies in the country, China still lags in AV tech development. Government initiatives including Made in China 2025 and the country’s ambitions to become a world leader in artificial intelligence by 2030 have been heralded as possible driving forces behind innovation in the country, but China still ranked 20th in terms of AV policy and legislation. KPMG said the government sector could promote AV adoption by spending more on communication infrastructure, which will form the backbone of networks allowing self-driving cars to “talk” to each other and sensors placed on roads.
]]>Exclusive: China ride-hailing giant Didi plans Chile, Peru launches to take on Uber – Reuters
What happened: Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi intends to launch its services in Peru, Chile, and Colombia, according to job listings and a company official. The company has already moved senior executives to South America to lead its expansion in the region. Didi has begun looking to fill positions relating to advertising, crisis management, marketing, and business development.
Why it’s important: The move escalates the competition between Didi and its international rival Uber. The two companies are already battling for market share in Brazil and Mexico. Didi CEO Cheng Wei said at an internal meeting last week that the company will focus on internationalization in 2019. At the same meeting, Cheng announced plans to lay off staff in China, as the company deals with increasingly strict regulation following the murder of two female passengers using its platform last year. It also reportedly faced record losses in 2018, amounting to nearly RMB 11 billion (around $1.6 billion).
]]>Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi will this year lay off 15% of its employees, amounting to around 2,000 people, a move that follows rumors the company made record-breaking losses in 2018.
Sources close to the company told TechNode that Didi CEO Cheng Wei made the announcement at an internal meeting on Friday, saying that the ride-hailing giant would cut headcount and that some non-core businesses would be re-evaluated and cut back if necessary.
Didi declined to comment when contacted by TechNode.
The move comes shortly after Didi was rumored to have made a loss of nearly RMB 11 billion (around $1.6 billion) in 2018. In December, Didi slashed its employees’ year-end bonuses in half, while executives received nothing, due to the company’s poor performance last year. Cheng said in an internal memo in September that Didi had “never achieved profitability” since its establishment.
Also in December, Didi announced a reorganization plan to improve passenger safety, while appointing two new executives to oversee emergency management. It also merged its car-hailing services into a single business to promote compliance.
At the meeting on Friday, Cheng said the layoffs are a result of the reorganization and a performance review
Sources said that the company plans to hire an additional 2,500 employees to focus on safety, compliance, offline driver management, and internationalization, among others. Didi is expected to end 2019 with around 13,000 employees in China, roughly the same as at the end of 2018.
The company has seen increased government and public scrutiny in the aftermath of two high profile safety incidents on its platform last year, in which two female passengers were murdered by their drivers while using Didi’s services. One of the drivers was sentenced to death earlier this month, while the body of the other alleged murderer was found in a river shortly after the incident.
A national-level investigation at the company’s headquarters following the incidents found that there were “serious safety hazards” in its carpooling service Hitch—the platform the drivers used to target their victims. The service has since been suspended indefinitely.
At the meeting, Cheng said that the entire ride-hailing industry had a long way to go before it achieved its security goals.
]]>What happened: Self-driving truck startup TuSimple, founded in 2015 with headquarters in the US and China, has reached unicorn status following its $95 million Series D. The funding round was led by Chinese tech giant Sina and Hong Kong-based investment firm Composite Capital. The money will help the company expand its fleet of test vehicles and fund joint production programs with truck manufacturers.
Why it’s important: As autonomous driving systems develop, self-driving cars have received most of the attention. However, the logistics industry could see drastic improvements in efficiency should companies adopt self-driving trucks, especially given the size of China’s e-commerce market. TuSimple has been testing its trucks in Arizona, making three to five autonomous trips per day. Late last year, the company was given permission to test its trucks on public roads in Shanghai. It has partnered with Shaanxi Automotive and Sinotruck, and is seeking to commercialize its technology by 2020.
]]>The success of China’s commercial artificial intelligence and semiconductor markets will have a direct impact on the country’s geopolitical and military power, according to a new report.
The report, published on Feb. 6 by US think tank the Centre for a New American Security (CNAS), said that the technologies could insulate China from economic or political pressure from the US while increasing the “technological capabilities available to China’s military and intelligence community.”
“… China’s success in commercial AI and semiconductor markets brings funding, talent, and economies of scale that both reduce China’s vulnerability from losing access to international markets,” the report said.
China has set ambitious goals for the development of AI and other hi-tech industries. The country plans to move to a high-value economy through its Made in China 2025 initiative by developing its autonomous and electric vehicle, semiconductor, robotics, and aerospace sectors. The State Council, China’s cabinet, has also laid out plans for the country to become a world leader in AI by 2030.
Infographic: How four tech giants dominate China’s AI endeavors
According to the CNAS report, China has already shrunk the gap between Chinese and international AI and semiconductor companies. It added that the country should hold a defensible technological position in AI over the next five years as long as there are no significant shifts in US policy aimed at increasing competition.
Civil-military integration is a cornerstone of China’s national AI strategy, wrote Gregory Allen, report author and adjunct senior fellow at CNAS’ Technology and National Security Program, highlighting the extent of the cooperation between the private sector and the country’s military.
Citing China’s National Intelligence Law, Allen said that China’s tech companies are legally required to cooperate with China’s military and state security organs, in effect, giving the military access to emerging technologies developed by the private sector.
In 2018, China’s central government named search giant Baidu, e-commerce company Alibaba, social media and messaging firm Tencent, voice recognition company iFlytek, and computer vision startup SenseTime the country’s “AI champions.” Citing Sensetime executives, Allen said that the position gives the five companies assurance that they will not be threatened by competition from state-owned enterprises.
“The price of Sensetime and the other AI Champions being allowed to dominate these technologies is the Champions’ extensive cooperation with China’s national security community,” Allen wrote.
]]>China has produced another study showing the potential of AI in medical diagnosis – Quartz
What happened: A study from China has shown again that an artificial intelligence system can be more effective at diagnosing ailments than some doctors. Researchers from China and the US trained the AI on electronic records from 1.3 million patient visits to a medical center in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong. The system was able to meet or outperform junior physicians in diagnosing childhood ailments ranging from asthma to sinusitis.
Why it’s important: With just 1.8 physicians per 1,000 people, China is in need of more doctors and nurses. The country has stepped up its efforts to develop artificial intelligence systems for medical diagnosis to relieve some of the pressure on its medical system. Last year, an algorithm from China was able to predict with 88% accuracy whether patients in a vegetative state would wake up. Additionally, an AI beat doctors at a competition in Beijing in diagnosing brain tumors.
]]>More than half of world’s AI unicorns are in China, says report – SCMP
What happened: China is home to the greatest number of artificial intelligence (AI) unicorns in the world, according to a report by research company CB Insights. Facial recognition startup Sensetime, valued at $4.5 billion, tops the list. Other companies include Yitu Technology, 4Paradigm, Face++, and self-driving firm Pony.ai.
Why it’s important: Artificial intelligence has been dubbed the fourth industrial revolution, and China has set ambitious goals for its development. The country hopes to catch up with the US’ AI capabilities by 2020, make breakthroughs by 2025, and become a world leader by 2030. The Chinese government has selected five companies to lead the country’s AI charge. These include search giant Baidu, e-commerce company Alibaba, social media and gaming giant Tencent, voice recognition firm iFlytek, and Sensetime. Nonetheless, despite not having reached unicorn status, the vast majority of AI startups are situated in the US, with just 23 of the top 100 located in other countries around the world, according to CB Insights.
]]>Shanghai taxi driver Yuan Wei isn’t concerned about being replaced by autonomous vehicles (AVs). “No one will be able to afford an unmanned car,” he says. “It must be expensive. Maybe RMB 1 million (around $150,000) or RMB 2 million.” Yuan may be right about the price of a driverless car—at least given today’s technology—but the threat to his livelihood may be closer than it appears.
The middle-aged cabbie was driving around Anting Town, the hotbed for automobile innovation that lies 40 kilometers northwest of downtown Shanghai. In Anting, charging stations for electric vehicles line the streets and electric taxis seem to outnumber their gas-guzzling counterparts. As Yuan pulled over to pick me up, a sign overhead drew my attention: “Intelligent Connected Vehicle Test Road,” it read. Unbeknownst to Yuan, he had stumbled upon one of two government-approved testing areas for self-driving cars in the city.
“There are driverless cars here?” he asked later. “I haven’t seen any.”
China has set ambitious goals for AVs. By 2020, half of all new cars on the country’s roads are expected to be autonomous or semi-autonomous. For now, they’re still restricted to driving on designated roads, but that will change. The number of these vehicles is expected to reach 8.6 million by 2035.
Self-driving cars and several related industries are crucial to China’s long-term plan to upgrade its economy by shifting away from traditional manufacturing. But autonomous vehicles are especially important. Their success is underpinned by the country’s artificial intelligence (AI) prowess, for which the national government has set formidable goals. The State Council, China’s cabinet, wants to be a world leader in AI by 2030, making the country’s self-driving development even more pressing.
A number of forces are driving China to take the AV wheel faster than other countries, but widescale adoption will be challenging. Legacy vehicles and self-driving cars will share the roads for some time, and traffic infrastructure will have to be drastically rethought. For better or worse, the transportation experience and the shape of our cities will be significantly shaped by the model and pace of AV adoption.
To keep up with the United States, China laid out national guidelines for testing self-driving cars in April last year. City governments have followed suit. Beijing, Chongqing, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou, in addition to Shanghai, have opened their roads to AVs.
Tech giants and startups are taking advantage of the government’s favorable regulatory environment. Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent are all developing platforms for self-driving vehicles while partnering with vehicle manufacturers.
Shanghai-based electric vehicle startup Nio is developing a self-driving car dubbed Eve, expected to be released in 2020, while Byton, which plans to open a vehicle factory in the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing this May, is developing its autonomous K-Byte model for launch in the same year.
In the parlance of AVs, most cars currently on the road are considered Level 0 vehicles—wholly dependent on their drivers. At the other end of the spectrum, Level 5 systems are entirely independent of human intervention in all situations.
Most Chinese autonomous driving companies are currently focused on Level 4 autonomy—fully independent within certain conditions. Level 3’s conditional automation systems are often seen as too dangerous for public use, as drivers are slow to take back control of the vehicle if a problem arises; companies like Google are opting to skip this level entirely. However, some companies, including Beijing-based Autobrain, are looking to take Level 3 vehicles to market by 2020.
At around 120 cars per 1,000 people, China’s rates of vehicle ownership pale in comparison to Europe and the US, says Bill Russo, ex-Chrysler executive and founder of consultancy Automobility. According to World Health Organization data, there were 830 vehicles per 1,000 people in the US in 2015, six times higher than in China. In the European Union, that number totaled just over 500.
“China … is starting at a different place and is perhaps willing to experiment in different ways, not just because the government wants it to, because the market is different, and because people don’t have deeply rooted [car ownership] habits,” Russo said at an industry event in Shanghai.
With low rates of car ownership and high demand for mobility, China has become the biggest ride-hailing market in the world. According to market research company Statista, the number of people in China using mobility services increased by 16% in 2018, reaching nearly 260 million. The number is expected to rise to more than 290 million this year.
In 2017, Didi Chuxing, China’s largest ride-hailing firm, facilitated more than 7 billion rides, according to the company, compared to Uber’s global total of 4 billion. Last year, the Chinese giant operated around 30 million rides a day.
While Didi dominates the market, other players are seeing increasing growth. Dida Chuxing became the second largest ride-hailing platform in China in October, jumping to 10 million daily active users. Other players include Meituan and Banma.
Just as the maritime industry served as a catalyst for public adoption of radios in the early 1900s, ride-sharing networks will act as a forerunner in AV adoption, using the data they collect to improve their self-driving abilities, while paving the way for more widespread adoption.
Still, nobody envisions a full-scale shift to driverless ride-hailing services anytime soon. Level 4 self-driving cars may be capable of functioning autonomously, but certain weather conditions pose a significant challenge to these vehicles’ self-driving capabilities. Consequently, mobility services would be well-equipped to handle such limitations by deploying AVs when road conditions are right, but continuing to use human-driven cars when their driverless counterparts can’t operate.
Those same limitations would make private ownership of self-driving cars less practical, at least in the initial stages of development.
On the tip of the eastern peninsula of Shanghai’s vast Pudong District, hugging the Yellow Sea, lies the almost perfectly circular Dishui Lake. Although the name translates to “Water Droplet Lake,” when seen from above, this man-made lake would seem to have been created with a hole punch.
Concentric roads surrounding the lake spread out like ripples. Similar to Anting, the area has been designated for autonomous vehicle testing. To a casual visitor, however, the sparse lanes feature more street sweepers than vehicles of the future. It looks much like any other developing part of Shanghai.
Throughout the 20th century, urban development around the world has been inexorably shaped by cars as highways feed sprawling low-density suburbs.
“The car has dictated major city developments in China,” Vicky Chan, founder at Avoid Obvious Architects, told TechNode. “It’s quite dramatic. Many cities are home to big company headquarters, which are meant to be appreciated from the highway.”
Private ownership of AVs, which is expected to become viable in a decade, could exacerbate urban sprawl. Imagine a scenario in which you could sleep or work in your car en route to the office. You could choose to live further away from work. But if everyone decided to do so, traffic congestion would rise commensurately.
Some have argued that in the next 10 to 20 years, AVs could become even cheaper to own and maintain than legacy vehicles, with their simpler electric engines and lighter bodies. The cost of manufacturing could also be reduced by removing driving interfaces—the steering wheel, the dashboard, and foot pedals.
The increased affordability and convenience of owning a car could make driver’s licenses an anachronism in an automated world, further increasing the number of vehicles on the roads.
“It can’t be that everyone is alone in their own capsule in their own vehicle,” said Tom Kirschbaum, founder at European public transport technology solutions provider Door2door.
“It’s clear that by only making vehicles autonomous you won’t win in terms of effects on congestion,” he said.
Research shows that the knee-jerk reaction of building more roads to alleviate congestion doesn’t work. A study by the US National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine found that every 1% increase in a highway’s capacity results in a 0.7% traffic increase in one to two years and a 0.3%-1.1% rise after five years.
The question, then, is whether networks of autonomous vehicles can provide a feasible alternative to the appeal of privately owned cars. According to Henry Liu, vice president of Didi, the future of transportation is not hailing a vehicle, but instead a seat in a car, making driverless fleets a smaller version of public transportation.
To Kirschbaum, blurring these lines is vital: “The gold standard in mobility would be a scenario where the user has a very seamless way of using a variety of transportation modes.”
The challenge lies in pushing cities to factor in technological innovation when making long-term policy decisions. “They try to figure out the impact for the next 10, 15, or 20 years. At times when things are changing so fast, and technology is changing so fast, this is a big clash,” he says.
]]>China sentences to death driver who killed passenger of ride-hailing firm Didi – Reuters
What happened: A Chinese court has sentenced 28-year-old former Didi driver Zhong Yuan to death for murdering and raping a passenger in the eastern coastal city of Wenzhou last year. The court made the announcement on microblogging platform Weibo. Zhong pleaded guilty earlier this month.
Why it’s important: The murder was the second high-profile incident perpetrated by Didi drivers last year, resulting in fierce criticism of the company by both the Chinese government and public. Didi has since moved to remove noncompliant drivers from its platform and restructured in an effort to increase the safety of its services. Following a series of government investigations, Didi was found to have “serious safety hazards” in its carpooling business Hitch, the same platform the drivers used to target their victims. The service has been suspended indefinitely.
]]>Didi Chuxing Mulls Layoffs – The Information (paywalled)
What happened: Chinese ride-hailing company Didi is reportedly mulling layoffs. While the move has not been finalized and figures may change, the company is looking to cut headcounts in some departments by as much as 20%. Staff from support departments including human resources and marketing will be the worst affected. The company currently has more than 10,000 employees around the globe.
Why it’s important: Didi, along with other ride-hailing and ride-sharing services in China, has had to deal with increased regulation following two high-profile murders of passengers that were using its platform. The company has since imposed and enhanced a number of safety features, but the incidents caused government and public backlash. As a result of tightening regulation, the pool from which the company can select drivers has shrunk. Didi has also fallen victim to China’s slowing economy. In December, the company cut its employees bonuses by 50% following its poor performance.
]]>China’s Didi, BAIC set up joint venture to work on NEV projects – Reuters
What happened: Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi has set up a joint venture (JV) with a unit of state-owned BAIC to work on new energy vehicles (NEV) and artificial intelligence. The JV aims to develop the next generation of connected car systems amid a shift by BAIC to move away from gas-driven cars by 2025.
Why it’s important: The market for NEVs in China is growing rapidly while the wider auto market cools. Sales of fully or partially electric vehicles jumped by nearly 62% to 1.3 million units in 2018. That number is expected to reach 1.6 million units in 2019, according to China’s Association of Automobile Manufacturers. Didi said there are already 400,000 NEVs operating on its platform through partnerships with auto manufacturers including BYD. NEVs and autonomous vehicles also form a central part of China’s Made in China 2025 initiative, in which Beijing seeks to move to a more high-value economy.
]]>Alibaba Opens Hotel to Showcase New Tech – Yicai Global
What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has opened a hotel in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou to showcase its latest technologies, including mobile payments, artificial intelligence, and service robots. Guests can use self-service terminals to check into the hotel, dubbed Flyzoo, and are able to control the lights, TV, and curtains in hotel rooms via voice commands. In addition, room service is delivered by service robots.
Why it’s important: The company has turned to AI and robots to reduce costs. Other hotels have tried and failed to automate their services using robots. Recently, the world’s first hotel manned by robots said it was “laying off” more than half of its robotic staff. Representatives from the hotel said the robots just weren’t reliable enough and often needed human intervention. Alibaba showed off its services robots at its Computing Conference last year. The company said at the time they would have applications in hotels and hospitals.
]]>Microsoft’s search engine Bing is once again accessible in China following an outage earlier this week that sparked concern it had become the latest victim of government censorship.
According to anonymous sources cited by Bloomberg, Bing was blocked due to an accidental technical error, rather than an act of censorship.
Users in China began reporting that service had been restored late on Thursday evening and its Chinese domain—cn.bing.com—was operational. A Microsoft representative confirmed to TechNode that the search engine was accessible on Friday morning.
The outage prompted concern over whether Bing had become the latest foreign search engine to be blocked by China’s Great Firewall, the country’s mechanism for regulating the Chinese internet by blocking access to foreign websites.
It also led to speculation that Bing’s outage was a result of an incident involving its Chinese rival, Baidu, which had been accused of promoting low-quality content (in Chinese).
Bing outage in China prompts censorship speculation among netizens
Chinese netizens on Wednesday afternoon posted accounts on popular messaging app WeChat and microblogging platform Weibo claiming that the search engine was inaccessible from within China. TechNode could not access the search engine’s Chinese domain as of 2 p.m. on Thursday. A Microsoft representative confirmed to TechNode that its services were unavailable at the time.
Bing remains the last major Western search engine in China. In order to operate in the country, the company has had to filter topics the Chinese government deems sensitive. The platform has minimal penetration in the country, holding just 2% of the market.
US search giant Google has reportedly been looking at re-entering the Chinese search market following its exit in 2010. The company was last year working on a search prototype dubbed Project Dragonfly as it explored ways to operate in the country while complying with Chinese laws. The initiative has since been shelved following internal complaints.
Additional reporting by Emma Lee.
]]>Researcher who created gene-edited babies has been fired – New Scientist
What happened: The Southern University of Science and Technology in the Chinese city of Shenzhen has fired He Jiankui, the scientist who stunned the world last year after announcing he had created gene-edited babies. The university said in a statement on its website that it will “rescind the work contract” with the researcher and terminate his teaching and research activities at the institution.
Why it’s important: He’s termination comes shortly after a preliminary investigation by provincial authorities that found the scientist had “illegally conducted the research in the pursuit of personal fame and gain.” The case has now been handed over to China’s Ministry of Public Security, which will conduct its own investigation. Importantly, the results of the preliminary investigation do not confirm He’s claims. Verification would require an independent team to replicate He’s results, which would mean taking samples from the babies, and publishing their findings for peer review.
]]>China’s Pinduoduo Reports Theft Worth Millions of Yuan – Caixin Global
What happened: Hackers have exploited a loophole in social e-commerce giant Pinduoduo’s platform allowing them to steal around RMB 10 million ($1.5 million) in online discount vouchers. The company said it has since fixed the bug reported the incident to the police. Users found that they were able to apply a free RMB 100 voucher to any product on the company’s platform. Large amounts of coupons were redeemed within the space of a few hours.
Why it’s important: The incident marks the second time in the past three months a technical problem has been found on the e-commerce giant’s platform. In November, the company had its app temporarily removed from Apple’s China App Store as a result of a bug. The company didn’t provide any further details. Following the recent incident, Pinduoduo denied any systematic security loopholes, saying that the collective exploited a loophole in its operating rules, though it didn’t elaborate.
]]>Alibaba to Postpone Some Hiring and Cut Travel Spending – Bloomberg
What happened: Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has reportedly cut travel spending and told new hires that they can only begin working in April, the fiscal new year. The travel cuts include business class airfare, with staff only being able to select a premium cabin on every fifth round trip that exceeds 20 hours. Sources also told Bloomberg that new hire headcounts are shrinking, with some people being told they would only be offered a job if they agreed to start working in April.
Why it’s important: China-US trade tensions and the country’s slowing economy have affected hardware manufacturers to consumer-facing businesses including the world’s most valuable startup Bytedance, which has said it barely hit its 2018 revenue target. In September, Alibaba Chairman Jack Ma warned about the challenges the company and economy would face should trade tensions escalate. Ma said that the trade dispute could last 20 years, much longer than just Donald Trump’s presidency.
]]>Chinese giant NetEase Games has for the first time moved to limit the amount of time China’s youth spend playing its games, highlighting the increased scrutiny of the country’s gaming sector.
Gaming companies have faced greater oversight for their alleged involvement in childhood gaming addiction. Last year, state mouthpiece the People’s Daily called Tencent’s online multiplayer title “Honour of Kings” poison, saying greater regulation of social games is needed.
NetEase will limit users 12-years-old and under to one hour of gameplay a day from Monday to Fridays, and two hours on Saturdays and Sundays, the company said in a statement. Gamers between the ages of 13 and 18 will be permitted to play two hours on weekdays and three hours on weekends.
NetEase will also ban underage players from logging on between 9:30 p.m. to 8:30 a.m every day. The system will initially be applied to 15 of its mobile games including “Fantasy Westward Journey” and “Knives Out,” starting this month.
Any unregistered users who have not undergone real-name verification will be limited to a two-hour game trial, not exceeding three games. The company is planning to confirm its user data against police records for the purpose of verification, a company spokesperson told TechNode.
The company will also give parents greater control over their children’s gaming habits through its NetEase Parenting Care platform. The feature allows caregivers to get information about playing time and in-app purchases, as well as apply for their children to be banned from playing certain games.
The move follows NetEase rival Tencent’s rollout of a series of features including limits on playing times last year. The company implemented features including real-name verification and facial recognition to impose the restrictions. Tencent vowed to expand its real-name verification system to all of its games during 2019, requiring its users to confirm their identities against a police database.
China’s gaming industry was plagued by a nine-month moratorium on issuing new game licenses. Approvals resumed in late December. However, the sector saw its slowest first-half revenue growth in 10 years, with more than 40% of Chinese-listed gaming companies seeing a year-on-year decrease in profit during the first three-quarters of 2018.
Additional reporting by Jill Shen
]]>What happened: Evergrande Health has purchased a 51% stake in electric vehicle manufacturer National Electric Vehicle Sweden (NEVS), marking its second foray into the electric car industry. The $930 million deal saw the company pay $430 million on Tuesday with the balance due by the end of the month. NEVS is Chinese consortium is owned by the municipal government of Tianjin—a city in northern China, among others.
Why it’s important: NEVS already has two vehicles that meet standards for mass production in China. The investment bolsters Evergrande’s plans to diversify its business to include electric vehicles, a move that hasn’t been without difficulties. Evergrande Health recently resolved a spat with Faraday Future, another electric vehicle company in which it has invested. The months-long conflict, which included arbitration in Hong Kong, came to an end after it agreed to restructure its pledge to the electric vehicle maker.
]]>What happened: Chinese autonomous driving startup Pony.ai has launched a WeChat mini-program allowing users in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou to hail autonomous taxis. The app was quietly released in late December. It allows passengers to hail the self-driving taxis from a pre-set location in the city’s Nansha District to other areas including Pony.ai’s offices and residential buildings, all of which are set by the company. Currently, only Pony.ai’s employees and a few VIPs can use the app.
Why it’s important: While rides are free, the company collects data during every trip, which helps to further enhance the capabilities of its autonomous driving systems. Pony.ai hopes to grow its fleet of vehicles from 20 to 100 in 2019, thereby further increasing its data collection capabilities. The company eventually want to scale the platform to create a new revenue stream—a move that could put it in competition with ride-hailing giant Didi.
]]>China’s Xiaomi Places a $1.5 Billion Bet on AI and Smart Devices – Bloomberg
What happened: Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi will invest more than RMB 10 billion (around $1.5 billion) in artificial intelligence and smart devices over the next five years. Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun said the company is looking to increase its focus on AIoT, referring to the combination of artificial intelligence and the internet of things. Xiaomi hopes to increase its revenue from high-value services while focusing on its presence in Europe.
Why it’s important: The company is looking to diversify its revenue streams amid slowing in the global smartphone market, which it expects to pick up again as 5G technologies proliferate. In the meantime, Xiaomi sees the investment as taking action while trade tensions between the US and China brew. The company was once touted as being able to reach a valuation of $100 billion from its IPO in July last year. However, its stock is down 40% since going public
]]>Tesla boss Elon Musk says he loves China, so Premier Li Keqiang offers him a green card – SCMP
What happened: Chinese Premier Li Keqiang offered Tesla CEO Elon Musk a green card earlier this week during a meeting at Zhongnanhai, the headquarters of the Communist Party and the government. During the meeting, Musk expressed his affection for China, with Li responding by saying he could be granted permanent residency. The meeting followed Musk’s visit to Tesla’s Gigafactory 3 project in Shanghai, the company’s first production base outside of the US.
What happened: China is looking to promote foreign investment and attract international talent. However, Chinese green cards are notoriously difficult to obtain. In 2016, around 10,000 were awarded to foreign nationals. In contrast, more than 1 million people were granted permanent residency in the US during 2017. Tesla’s factory is a big deal for Shanghai. It is the largest foreign investment-funded industrial project in the city’s history. Li said he welcomed greater cooperation with companies from around the world.
]]>Didi Employees Involved in Over 60 Internal Corruption Cases Last Year – Caixin Global
What happened: Ride-hailing giant Didi said it dismissed more than 80 employees last year after its compliance staff found in excess of 60 cases of internal corruption. The employees were laid off for alleged “severe violations” of the firm’s rules, which involved cases of fraud, bribes, or information security breaches. The company handed over the former employees to police for suspected illegal behavior.
Why it’s important: Chinese tech companies have stepped up internal investigations in an attempt to stamp out corruption within their ranks. Tencent, Baidu, Xiaomi, and JD have all launched similar initiatives. Recently, super lifestyle app Meituan sent 90 of its and its partner companies’ employees to the police for suspected wrongdoing. Last year was a difficult one for Didi. The company faced increased public and government scrutiny following the murders of two female passengers who booked rides on its carpooling service Hitch. The company restructured and updated its safety systems in response.
]]>Bitcoin Mining Chip Maker Canaan Considers U.S. IPO – Bloomberg
What happened: China’s second-biggest bitcoin mining equipment manufacturer Canaan Creative is considering a US listing after setting aside its plans for a Hong Kong initial public offering (IPO). The company, which was previously targeting $1 billion, may go public as soon as the first half of 2019, according to Bloomberg sources. The company sells its equipment under the “Avalon” brand, which includes application-specific chips that solve complex mathematical problems to mine cryptocurrency.
Why it’s important: The price of bitcoin has fallen around 80% since its high in December 2017, making it difficult for companies operating in the bitcoin space to attract stock market investors. It also reduces profitability for bitcoin miners—exactly the group Canaan targets. Rival firm Bitmain has reportedly been laying off employees amid the industry crunch. Canaan initially planned to IPO in Hong Kong. However, it let its application lapse in November. Bitmain and fellow rival Ebang also had plans to go public in the city.
]]>Huawei launches server chipset as China pushes to cut reliance on imports – Reuters
What happened: Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei on Monday launched a server chipset dubbed the Kunpeng 920. Designed by Huawei’s chipmaking subsidiary HiSilicon, the chipset marks an increased push to boost its credentials a semiconductor designer. However, Huawei stipulated that it has no intention of becoming solely a chipmaking company, saying the newly launched tech is part of its “system solution and cloud servicing for clients.”
Why it’s important: Huawei has seen increased international scrutiny of its telecommunication equipment, from which it receives a considerable portion of its revenue. The company now seeks growth avenues in cloud computing to offset the lack of trust abroad. The launch of the chip serves to increase capabilities in this area. The move also falls in line with China’s push to decrease its reliance on foreign-made technology following a ban on ZTE sourcing American components last year. ZTE said the ban could have crippled its business and later paid fines and replaced its executives to have it lifted.
]]>Chinese censors go old school to clamp down on Twitter: A knock on the door – The Washington Post
What happened: Chinese authorities have begun clamping down on prominent Twitter users in the country, ordering them to remove Tweets relating to China-US relations, among others. Some users who didn’t comply with the order found that their accounts were hacked and offending Tweets deleted. According to The Washington Post, more than 40 people have been ordered to remove content from their accounts.
Why it’s important: Access to Twitter in China requires the use of software to bypass state-imposed firewalls. While most foreign social media platforms are blocked, authorities rarely take direct action against citizens for using them. Twitter has a minuscule 10 million users in China, compared to hundreds of millions on microblogging platform Weibo, making the move surprising. Domestically, regulators have cracked down on short-video platforms, content aggregators, and social media services, holding them accountable for the content users create on their platforms.
]]>Apple cuts sales forecast as China sales weaken; iPhone pricing in focus – Reuters
What happened: In a rare move, Apple has cut its quarterly sales forecast, blaming its poor performance on trade tensions between China and the US, as well as economic deceleration in Greater China. In a letter to investors, Apple CEO Tim Cook said the company had not anticipated the magnitude of the slowdown in the region. Cook also that Chinese consumers may have elected not to buy iPhones because Apple is an American company, instead opting to support the firm’s Chinese competitors.
Why it’s important: While Apple has blamed support for Chinese brands and a slowing economy on its revenue drop, analysts pointed out that the company itself may be to blame. Increasingly high prices could have also played a role. Some of the company’s iPhones have passed the $1,000 mark while Chinese brands look to fill the mass market. The drop in sales was also not entirely a surprise. In November, the company said it would stop reporting unit sales data for iPhones and other products. The move led analysts to believe a drop was coming.
]]>China launches first satellite in bid to create global communications network and broaden net access – SCMP
What happened: China aims to bridge the digital divide following the launch of an experimental satellite in December, hoping to connect 600 million rural Chinese citizens who currently don’t have access to the internet. Dubbed the Hongyun Project, the initiative will include the launch of four additional satellites by 2020 to form a constellation. It is expected to become operational by 2022.
Why it’s important: Connecting China’s rural communities is an essential milestone in boosting the country’s digital economy and bringing some of the conveniences of city living to people in the countryside. Increased connectivity in underdeveloped areas of the country is a crucial step in expanding the country’s e-commerce sector and boosting domestic consumption. It could also give rural populations the opportunity to access online educational resources as China seeks to move to a high-value economy as part of its Made in China 2025 initiative.
]]>China’s Online Lending Crackdown May See 70% of Businesses Close – Bloomberg
What happened: As few as 300 peer-to-peer (P2P) lending platforms may survive a government crackdown on risky lending platforms that led to a 50% drop in the number of operators in 2018. According to Shanghai-based research firm Yingcan Group, there have been no new entrants to the sector since August. SoftBank-backed Yidai is the latest company to exit the market. The firm has 32,000 lenders who are owed RMB 4 billion (around $580 million) and expects to pay them back in the next five years.
Why it’s important: China’s P2P lending industry shrunk significantly in 2018. Following increasing default rates, the government stepped in to regulate the sector. Authorities are cracking down on small- and medium-sized lending platforms. The market in some cases led to lenders losing their life-savings as well as protests in various cities around the country. According to financial services firm Rong 360, there were more than 800 P2P loan platforms in 2018 that were deemed to be problematic, where users couldn’t withdraw their money between February and November.
]]>What happened: Beidou, China’s answer to America’s Global Positioning System (GPS), has launched its global services ahead of schedule. The previous rollout target was 2020. The service offers worldwide location services with an accuracy of 5 meters within the Asia-Pacific region and 10 meters in other areas. The system is one of four global navigation satellite systems, joining America’s GPS, Russia’s Glonass, and Europe’s Galileo.
Why it’s important: The move is part of a wider Chinese effort to become a world leader in space and related technologies as part of its “Made in China 2025” initiative. While GPS is accurate to within a few centimeters, there are concerns that the US could shut off service during wartime. China has already shipped more than 70 million Beidou systems to over 90 countries. Most smartphones being sold in the country, including Huawei and Xiami, as well as 2 million vehicles, are compatible with the system.
]]>Huawei Had a Deal to Give Washington Redskins Fans Free Wi-Fi, Until the Government Stepped In – Wall Street Journal
What happened: A 2014 deal between Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei and US football team the Washington Redskins to provide Wi-Fi in viewing suits at FedEx Field came undone after a government advisor issued an “unofficial federal complaint” to the team, citing national security concerns. Huawei would have received advertising in the stadium and during broadcasts in exchange for the Wi-Fi services. However, the football team walked away from the agreement as a result of the complaint.
Why it’s important: The deal came years before the arrest of Huawei’s CFO and moves to block the company’s equipment from 5G networks around the world. However, the complaint highlighted the same concerns congress members and US intelligence agencies have raised for a number of years—the company’s alleged close links to the Chinese government. Despite the US, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand moving to limit Huawei’s equipment in their 5G networks, the company shipped a record-breaking 200 million smartphones in 2018.
]]>China’s Bitmain Technology and Huobi plan layoffs as cryptocurrency crunch begins to bite – SCMP
What happened: Two Chinese cryptocurrency giants have confirmed plans to lay off employees amid an industry crunch. Cryptocurrency mining rig manufacturer Bitmain said it is undergoing “some adjustment to our staff this year,” while exchange operator Huobi is “optimizing staffing.” However, both companies declined to comment on how many cuts they are making.
Why it’s important: The planned layoffs come amid a bear market in cryptocurrencies. Bitcoin has lost more than $170 billion in market value this year, falling in excess of 70%. In total, nearly $500 billion has been wiped off the value of around 2,000 cryptocurrencies. Bitmain and Huobi’s moves follow a trend by other international industry players including social network Steemit and software production studio ConsenSys, which is laying off 13% of its 1000 employees. Bitmain has this year proposed going public in Hong Kong.
]]>Weibo plans to increase content-driven e-commerce investment – China Daily
What happened: Chinese microblogging platform Weibo will invest RMB 2 billion (around $300 million) in the next two years to support content-driven e-commerce, key opinion leaders (KOLs), actors, and agencies. The move comes amid growth in the platform’s active content creators, with more than 50,000 KOLs having in excess of 500,000 followers each. The company claims that content creators on Weibo made RMB 27 billion in 2018, most of which came from e-commerce sales.
Why it’s important: Content-driven e-commerce is big business in China. Entertainment platforms have attempted to retain their users by including e-commerce features in their platforms. On Monday, short video app Kuaishou upgraded its e-commerce services, partnering with online marketplace giants Taobao and Tmall. It also improved the functionality of its online store. Longer form video platforms also aren’t missing out. Video streaming service Bilibili partnered with Taobao to connect content creators with users while promoting merchandise through interactive content.
]]>Mobike founder Hu Weiwei quits chief executive role at China’s leading bike-sharing firm – SCMP
What happened: Mobike co-founder and CEO Hu Weiwei has resigned for “personal reasons.” The 36-year-old entrepreneur announced her departure in an internal letter to the company’s employees on Sunday. She said that she had completed her mission at the bike-rental firm and had decided to move on. The letter was quickly uploaded to Chinese social media. Mobike’s current president, Liu Yu, will succeed her as CEO.
Why it’s important: Hu’s resignation comes at a tumultuous time in China’s bike-rental industry. Rival firm Ofo has been in crisis mode after more than 12 million users requested their deposits be returned to them, potentially putting the company in more than RMB 1 billion ($145 million) of debt. Mobike was acquired by Chinese lifestyle app Meituan Dianping earlier this year, though the company has experienced sustained financial losses. Hu decided to stay amid the sale. However, how much she earned from the deal has not been disclosed.
]]>China’s Robot Spending to Reach USD80 Billion by 2022, IDC Projects – Yicai Global
What happened: China’s spending on robotics and related services is expected to reach $80 billion by 2022, 38% of the global market, according to market intelligence firm International Data Corporation. The sector is predicted to reach an annual compound growth rate of 27%. The firm says that discrete manufacturing industries, including auto, electronics, and metal processing will reach a market size of almost $17 billion next year.
Why it’s important: Robotics forms an important development goal for China. As part of its “Made in China 2025” initiative, the country aims to move to high-value manufacturing, including robotics, chipmaking, and autonomous vehicles. The spending guide highlights business opportunities in the sector, where autonomous mobility and collaborative robots can help to improve production efficiency, productivity, and capacity among the country’s population and enterprises. Robotics may also help to mitigate the effects of China’s aging population, acting as an alternative labor supply.
]]>Tencent Joins Naspers in a $1 Billion Funding for India’s Swiggy – Bloomberg
What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent joined its biggest shareholder Naspers in a $1 billion investment in Indian food delivery service Swiggy. While Tencent did not reveal the size of its own investment, nearly 70% came from Naspers. The two investors were joined by Meituan, DST Global, and Hillhouse Capital, among others. The financing found values Swiggy at $3.3 billion, up from $1 billion at the end of June.
Why it’s important: Tencent isn’t a newcomer to India’s tech scene. The company already controls a stake in e-commerce firm Flipkart and ride-hailing company Ola. In April the Chinese giant was rumored to have invested $100 million in Mumbai-based online fantasy sports platform Dream 11. Swiggy is one of a number of Indian startups capitalizing on the country’s rapid smartphone adoption rates. Both Tencent and Naspers have had a bad year after the Chinese company lost more than $200 billion in market value, resulting in a 19% slump in Naspers’ shares.
]]>German security office warned German firms about Chinese hacking: report – Reuters
What happened: Germany’s Office for Information Security (BSI) has reportedly warned firms that they could be victims of hacking attacks, with Chinese activity against German companies increasing. The BSI says the firms were named by the US. According to the report, the attacks may not be happening on a weekly basis, but the attackers act in a more targeted way, which could result in considerable damage.
Why it’s important: In September, a German spy chief said a growing number of counties could hack into private computer networks hoping to sabotage another country’s infrastructure. He pointed out that nations including China and Russia have continued to try and break into German companies’ networks to steal industrial information. The report comes the same week Germany is set to toughen rules on non-EU acquisitions of strategic German companies amid growing fears of takeovers by Chinese firms.
]]>Tencent-backed short video app Kuaishou launches mini game similar to WeChat’s offering – SCMP
What happened: Chinese short video platform Kuaishou has launched a feature allowing users to play video games within its app, negating the need to download them to their phones. So far there is only one game available within Kuaishou’s app. The new feature allows users to share their scores with other Kuaishou gamers. The mini-game was reported earlier this week by some users of the platform, though it currently appears to be under testing for selected users.
Why it’s important: Chinese tech companies are competing to become all-in-one entertainment platforms, aiming to keep users within their ecosystems for as long as possible. Kuaishou follows WeChat in launching its mini-game feature, the latter company including the ability to play in-app games last year. However, WeChat’s reach extends much further than just entertainment. It incorporates services including food delivery, bill payments, and travel bookings, among others. Earlier this year, Alibaba also added mini-games to its Taobao marketplace.
]]>Frustrated Shared-Bike Riders Go to Ofo in Search of Refunds – Caixin Global
What happened: More than 100 users of cash-strapped bike-rental platform ofo gathered outside the company’s Beijing office yesterday to demand deposit refunds. The users had paid up to RMB 199 (around $30) to register on the platform. The company allowed batches of people into the building every 10 minutes to make their cases. However, even after showing up users couldn’t immediately get their money. They were asked to write down their personal information and promised refunds within three days.
Why it’s important: ofo users have become increasingly frustrated by the company’s deposit refund policies, which have increased to the initial wait time of three days to 15 days. Even so, some users have reported waiting up to a month for their money to be returned. The company has been in the grips of a cash crunch, retreating from international markets amid rumors of layoffs and a possible acquisition by ride-hailing giant Didi. Most recently, ofo has been partnering with online lenders, promoting the companies’ products within its app as it seeks additional revenue streams.
]]>At Gathering of Spy Chiefs, U.S., Allies Agreed to Contain Huawei – Wall Street Journal
What happened: At a meeting in July, spy chiefs from an intelligence alliance known as the “Five Eyes”—made up of Canada, the US, the UK, Australia, and New Zealand—agreed they needed to contain Huawei. Soon afterward, the chiefs began speaking out against Chinese-made gear, especially related to 5G networks. The discussion focused on how to protect telecommunications networks from external interference.
Why it’s important: Huawei has faced an increasing number of roadblocks outside of China, particularly when it comes to 5G infrastructure. Most recently, the Japanese government put a plan in motion to block the company from government procurement. Officials explicitly stated that they had been communicating with the United States on cybersecurity issues. Australia, New Zealand, and the UK have made moves to limit Huawei’s influence on their telecommunications infrastructure. The company’s CFO Meng Wanzhou was arrested in Canada earlier this month for alleged crimes related to violating sanctions on Iran. She has been released on bail and faces extradition to the US.
]]>Tencent CEO Pony Ma tells staff that ‘responsibility’ was the main lesson learned from a tough year – SCMP
What happened: Executives at Chinese tech giant Tencent have told employees that responsibility, respect, and kindness are the main takeaways from 2018. The comments were made at a staff meeting on Wednesday. Tencent CEO Ma Huateng said that the company needs to improve the daily lives of ordinary citizens in order to become the country’s most respected internet company.
Why it’s important: Tencent, China’s biggest social media and gaming company, has had a tough year. The Chinese government has led crackdowns on “cultural content,” including videos and games. Approvals of new game titles were halted in March, which was followed by the company losing more $200 billion in market value. The company has subsequently attempted to appease regulators by imposing features aimed at limiting underage users’ gaming time. Amid the slowdown, Tencent announced a restructuring plan aimed at expanding its consumer focus to include enterprises, in part driven through significant investment in cloud computing.
Apple says it will update software in response to China iPhone injunctions – SCMP
What happened: In order to avoid compliance issues, US technology giant Apple has said it will release a software update next week after a Chinese court issued an order instructing the company to stop selling certain iPhone models in China. The move comes after the court granted US chipmaker Qualcomm two preliminary injunctions against Apple in an ongoing patent dispute.
Why it’s important: Apple is still currently selling its phones in the country through its online and offline stores. As a result, Qualcomm says it has contacted to court to enforce the ruling. The spat comes as Apple is already under pressure in from competitors in the region, which offer high-spec models at lower price points. Apple suppliers have also said they would pull production from China if higher tariffs are imposed amid the trade war between the US and China. Should the rates rise to 25%, with the US giant absorbing the costs, Apple would face an earnings-per-share (EPS) decline of $2.50.
Apple suppliers to consider moving China iPhone output if tariffs hit 25% – Bloomberg
What happened: Apple suppliers in China will consider shifting production out of the country if US tariffs reach 25%. The American tech giant and its partners are assessing their supply chains in the US and China amid tensions between the two countries. A 10% tariff could result in an earnings-per-share (EPS) decline of $1 for Apple if all its hardware in the US is subject to the levy and the company absorbs the costs. However, a 25% tariff would result in an EPS decline of $2.50.
Why it’s important: iPhones have so far remained unaffected by the US-China trade war. However, President Donald Trump said last month that tariffs could be imposed on smartphones and laptops that are made in China. The country has long been Apple’s primary production base for the majority of its hardware. Its supply chain spans hundreds of companies, with firms including Hon Hai Precision Industry and Pegatron assembling its products.
]]>Central bank deputy governor: STO business ‘essentially an illegal financial activity in China’ – SCMP
What happened: China’s central bank has made clear its position on security coin offerings (STOs), classing them as an “illegal financial activity.” Pan Gongsheng, deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), clarified the institution’s stance at a forum in Beijing on Saturday (Dec. 8). He said that virtual forms of money had become an accomplice to “all kinds of illegal and criminal activities.”
Why it’s important: Pan’s comments come a week after the head of the Beijing Financial Supervision Authority warned businesses in the city against engaging in STOs, also calling them illegal activities. The country has been tightening its controls over cryptocurrencies over the past year. Following a ban on initial coin offerings (ICOs), authorities have shut down blockchain-related social media groups, banned events in a number of cities around the country, and shut down or limited access to cryptocurrency exchanges.
]]>Police from China’s Guangdong province have arrested a 22-year-old man surnamed Luo allegedly responsible for creating the country’s first ransomware that requires payment through WeChat.
Law enforcement from the southern city of Dongguan made the announcement on microblogging platform Weibo yesterday (Dec. 6), adding that the suspect, from the province’s Maoming city, was arrested on Dec. 5.
The malware, which was first discovered on Dec. 1, encrypted files on its victims’ computers. It also stole 50,000 user passwords and other data from users of online marketplace Taobao, mobile payment platform Alipay, and cloud service Baidu Wangpan. The ransomware infected more than 100,000 computers.
Victims were then required to use WeChat to pay RMB 110 (around $16) to decrypt their files. Tencent said the payment account was shut down as of Sunday (Dec. 2).
According to the police statement, this is not the first piece of malicious software the suspect has developed. In June 2018, he allegedly created malware capable of stealing Alipay passwords to transfer a victim’s funds.
Data theft has become an increasingly common problem in China. In April, a group of data thieves was found selling personal information for as little as $2. According to an arrestee, he made more than $17,000 between December 2017 and the time he was caught.
In a similar case, police from Wuxi in the eastern Chinese province of Jiangsu uncovered a sophisticated network of data thieves that made up to RMB 1 million trading personal information. The group’s decentralized nature was novel, with its network stretching across numerous Chinese provinces and into Southeast Asia.
In other instances, Apple affiliates have been found stealing iPhone users’ data. While data belonging to users some of the country’s biggest food delivery platforms was sold for as little as RMB 0.10.
]]>China takes a step closer to unveiling a new stock market inspired by Nasdaq – SCMP
What happened: Shanghai Stock Exchange’s technology innovation board, China’s answer to the Nasdaq, will begin accepting IPO applications as early as March 2019, with listings planned for June. Unprofitable companies will likely be permitted to raise funds, but only those focusing on core technologies, including computing, software, and pharmaceutical drug development, will be welcomed.
Why it’s important: The plan was first laid out by Chinese President Xi Jinping in November in order to make Shanghai an appealing international financial center. Regulators are reportedly considering dramatic steps to make the bourse more attractive, including the removal of profit requirements, loosening foreign-exchange controls, and offering a flexible trading system. Currently, unprofitable companies are prohibited from raising funds on the country’s stock exchanges. However, there will be limitations. Blockchain companies, bike-rental services, and other unproven online platforms will be excluded from listing.
]]>China’s largest online used car market Uxin and Alibaba’s Taobao are banding together to combat the limited variety of secondhand cars in Chinese cities.
“With extremely limited car selection in most cities, there is a rapidly growing demand for an online platform that expands access to used cars from across the country,” Dai Kun, CEO of Uxin, said in a statement.
The companies will establish an online used car shopping mall with features including video VR car viewing to give prospective buyers a better indication of the car’s condition, hoping to foster growth in the already growing used car e-commerce sector.
Since China moved to lift bans on the trade of non-local used cars, the industry has been showing signs of growth. In 2017, 12.4 million secondhand vehicles were sold. While it may not sound like much given the country’s population, the figure represents an annual growth rate of 19%. Sales are expected to reach 20 million by 2020.
Dai says that buyers, especially those in lower-tier cities, have become more receptive to buying used cars as a cost-effective alternative to new vehicles.
In a statement to TechNode, Dai said that the country’s consumers have adapted to e-commerce faster than consumers elsewhere and that it is natural for them to buy more and more valuable items online.
Users of the online car mall will also have access to a range of financing and post-transaction services.
]]>Tesla Shanghai Plant to Start Partial Operations in Next Year’s Second Half – Yicai Global
What happened: American car manufacturer Tesla will begin partial operations at its Shanghai plant—its first factory outside the US—in the second half of 2019. Leveling at the site is already complete, and the plant is set to move on to the next phase of construction. The factory will integrate research and development, manufacturing, and sales.
Why it’s important: The plant is significant for Tesla and Shanghai. According to Mayor Ying Yong, it is the largest foreign investment-funded industrial project in the city’s history. In line with the country’s “Made in China 2025” plan, the city is moving towards advanced manufacturing and emerging industries. As part of the broad strategy, China aims to promote the country’s high-tech development by focusing on the manufacture of chips, robotics, new energy vehicles, and aviation equipment, among others.
Tencent Music presses play on $1.2 billion U.S. IPO – Reuters
What happened: Tencent Music submitted its IPO filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission earlier this week. The company plans to list on the New York Stock Exchange and raise between $1.07 billion and $1.23 billion. It will sell 82 million American Depositary Receipts (ADRs) at between $13 and $15 each.
Why it’s important: The company initially filed for its IPO in October. However, to due unfavorable global stock market conditions, it decided to delay the process. It initially sought to raise $2 billion but has since downgraded its fundraising target. Sources told Reuters that Tencent Music was aiming to get listed this year because of fear over US-China trade tensions, and not because it desperately needed the money. The IPO could be one of the biggest by a Chinese company this year, falling behind iQiyi and Pinduoduo.
]]>Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba inked an agreement with the government of Belgium to promote cross-border trade and confirmed plans to establish a smart logistics hub in the Belgian city of Liege.
The aim of the agreement is to enhance overall logistics efficiency for small to medium enterprises in the region and aid them in becoming more competitive amid a surge in global e-commerce.
In a statement, Alibaba CEO, Daniel Zhang, said the deal would open up “huge potential” for European companies to reap the benefits of cross-border trade, particularly in China where there’s high demand for European goods.
“With over 98% of European companies being small to medium businesses, this partnership signifies our initial and expanded effort to enhance inclusive trade opportunities for these business in Belgium and across Europe,” said Zhang.
Alibaba’s logistics arm Cainiao has promised €75 million ($85 million) in initial investment for the smart hub at Liege Airport, the first phase of which will begin operating in 2021. Reports of the Liege hub plan appeared in European media outlets last month.
Cainiao will lease a plot of land of total area of 220,000 square meters to house the logistics hub.
The move also highlights Alibaba Group’s resolve in helping import $200 billion worth of goods to China over the next five years, a plan it announced at the China International Import Expo, which took place in Shanghai last month.
Alibaba has signed similar agreements with the governments of Malaysia and Rwanda in the past to tap into developing markets.
In addition, the government of Belgium and Alibaba said they would work together to introduce new technologies for the digitization of customs procedures that promote efficient clearance of goods.
]]>SoftBank’s Vision Fund to hire China team, set up mainland office: sources – Reuters
What happened: Japanese conglomerate SoftBank is hiring an investment team in China to form part of Vision Fund, its advisory firm that makes investments in the technology sector. According to sources, an office will be set up in Shanghai, with the intention of expanding to Hong Kong and Beijing. The company plans to hire about 20 people.
Why it’s important: The Vision Fund is no stranger to China. Since May 2017, it has invested in truck-hailing Man Bang Group, Ping An Healthcare, and ByteDance, the company that runs new aggregator Jinri Toutiao and short video app Douyin (known as TikTok internationally). After expanding to India and Saudi Arabia, the Vision Fund has now set its sights on the Chinese tech market. SoftBank was also an early backer of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, investing as far back as 2000.
]]>Alex Younger: MI6 chief questions China’s role in UK tech sector – BBC News
What happened: Amid concerns about Chinese-made communications infrastructure, Alex Younger, the chief of British intelligence agency MI6, said the country needs to decide how comfortable it is using foreign controlled technology, including 5G hardware supplied by Chinese companies. He said that the UK’s adversaries have been probing its defenses and institutions and that the country’s intelligence agencies need to innovate faster.
Why it’s important: Chinese telecommunications companies Huawei and ZTE have been facing increased scrutiny abroad. In August, Australia announced it would ban the companies from supplying equipment for its 5G network, citing national security concerns. The US is hoping to take similar steps, while US senators have warned Canada to exclude Huawei from its 5G deployment. Most recently, US lawmakers told the White House that ZTE might have broken a deal with the US following its dealings in Venezuela, which could result in millions in fines.
]]>Kenya’s M-Pesa mobile money service now works with China’s WeChat Pay – Quartz
What happened: Chinese WeChat Pay users are now able to accept payments from the East African country of Kenya. Family Bank, a financial institution headquartered in the country’s capital, along with London-based fintech company SimbaPay have launched a platform enabling users of Kenyan mobile money service M-Pesa to remit cash to users of the Tencent-owned payments platform.
Why it’s important: The move likely targets Kenyan traders who purchase Chinese goods to sell in the East African country. A service like this could make remittances quicker and cheaper than going through traditional transfer systems. Chinese payment services like WeChat have been expanding their offerings abroad, making tourism and trade easier for Chinese citizens by signing up merchants in foreign markets. Both WeChat and Alipay also allow Chinese tourists to claim tax refunds before leaving their holiday destination or after returning home.
]]>WeChat cancels drift bottle citing porn and prostitutes – SCMP
What happened: Tencent will remove its ‘drift bottle’ feature from WeChat, which allowed users to send voice and text messages for strangers to pick up within the app. The tech giant has said the system was used to “disseminate pornography and solicit prostitutes.” The move comes after it received user complaints and media attention for the illicit use of the messaging service.
Why it’s important: The planned removal comes as Chinese companies police their platforms more strictly amid increased pressure from regulators. Authorities have been pushing to clean up “vulgar” content, fake accounts, and rumors on the internet. Short video services have previously been some of the hardest hit, but it has also extended to gaming and news platforms. Recently Baidu was fined RMB 600,000 for circulating ads containing pornography, gambling, and violence. The industry crackdown has led to the closure of 9,800 social media accounts on WeChat, Weibo, Baidu, and Jinri Toutiao.
]]>In China, your car could be talking to the government – Associated Press
What happened: More than 200 electric vehicle manufacturers with cars on China’s roads transmit position data, as well as 60 other data points, including mileage and battery charge, to the Chinese government to comply with Chinese laws. The regulations apply to both domestic and international alternative energy vehicle manufacturers. An investigation by the Associated Press found that, generally, car owners are unaware the data is being collected.
Why it’s important: Chinese authorities have defended the move, saying the data is used to improve public safety, promote development and infrastructure planning, and prevent subsidy fraud. Critics argue that collection exceeds what is required to meet these goals. Gathering such information is commonplace around the world, but the flow usually stops at the manufacturer, and requests for data by the government and law enforcement are typically required to go through the courts. Currently, electric cars produce limited data, but Chinese authorities could be setting a precedent for when autonomous vehicles, which have much broader data processing abilities, are commonplace on the country’s roads.
]]>China’s ZTE cheated on deal with US, senators tell White House – SCMP
What happened: US Senators Marco Rubio and Chris Van Hollen have told key members of the White House that ZTE may have violated the terms of a settlement agreement signed with the US government. The senators said ZTE set up a population database for the Venezuelan government using components that were allegedly supplied by US-based Dell Technologies. ZTE reportedly embedded some of its employees within Venezuela’s state telecommunications firm, CANTV, the president of which is subject to US sanctions.
Why it’s important: Earlier this year, ZTE paid $1.4 billion in fines as well as escrow funds, appointed a new board of directors, and vowed to uphold US sanctions after it was found to have violated sanctions on Iran and North Korea and later lied about its dealings. Before making the payment, the company was prohibited from sourcing US-made components, crippling the telecommunications giant. Senators Rubio and Van Holen have been at the forefront of efforts aimed at reimposing punishments on ZTE should they violate the agreement. Currently, the only punishment for future violations is the loss of the $400 million in escrow.
]]>In China, shared power banks, cars, and vending machines have more in common than is evident at first glance. The technologies aren’t new, far from it. But they have been given new life by the internet. And more specifically, data.
Data is the lifeblood of artificial intelligence (AI), for which China has huge ambitions. The country has developed an outline to become the world leader in AI technologies by 2030. Companies are looking to cash in on this trend, but by developing data-first strategies they could be putting the country’s citizens at risk.
Speaking at TechCrunch Shenzhen 2018, Ren Mu, chief marketing officer at Laidian Technology, a firm that provides shared power banks, said that some players in the industry believe creating access to data-driven products is more important than the power bank sharing itself.
He added that renting power banks will create the second largest market after bike sharing for credit data generation by recording users’ rental patterns. This is similar to platforms such as Alibaba’s Sesame Credit, thereby creating opportunities for new players who wish to use data for future non-power bank businesses, such as in retail.
It’s also an important asset for vending machine companies, which use it to provide insights into purchasing behavior in defined geographical areas.
Once collected, data can then be used to enter more retail scenarios in related areas as it can provide data for management decision-making, an executive from a leading automatic vending machine manufacturer based in Guangdong province told TechNode.
“Many new retail startups, particularly those involved with hardware and cloud services, essentially run data businesses,” said the vending machine executive, who requested anonymity citing his sensitive position within the industry.
“This is not a secret in the industry anymore,” he added. “Now, it’s a strategy.”
In the automobile industry, data could not just be used to train autonomous driving models, but also for entertainment purposes.
Michael Shu, general manager of the Auto Intelligent Ecology Institute at Chinese carmaker BYD, told the audience at TechCrunch that, in the past machines we used every day merely needed to protect users’ physical safety. “If the physical performance was good, it will be accepted,” he said.
“Once your vehicle becomes smart there are other types of problems, like cybersecurity issues … There is always a zero-sum game between you and hackers,” said Shu.
Data quickly becomes an asset that could raise a company’s valuation and market potential, which will then incentivize more data collection on all available digital channels, including those that navigate existing regulation.
In a country that is flush with data, overcollection could have severe consequences for Chinese individuals. Data breaches and the sale of personal information have become a means of making a quick buck among the country’s data thieves, with both the sophistication and scope of these breaches increasing.
In August, more than 130 million customers were affected by a data breach in which 13 hotels operated by Huazhu Group had personal data and booking information stolen—the most significant such leak in five years. Just a week earlier, third-party developer for Chinese mobile operators Ruizhi Huasheng was exposed for collecting three billion pieces of personal user information from Tencent, WeChat, Alibaba, among others. It had placed malicious software on the mobile operators’ servers.
In a discussion at TechCrunch focusing specifically on the technical challenges of managing credit risk in a country with little traditional credit data, Shi Hongzhe, vice president at online lending company LexinFintech, said the company is hoping to use “weak connections”—data without a direct relation to the result of a computation—to build up risk models.
The “weak connections,” as acknowledged by engineers and managers in the field, could include the speed at a user types her ID number. At a fintech forum organized by Blue Whale Media in Beijing in August, Souyidai, an online lending platform run by internet and gaming market leader NetEase, said the company has built around 8,000 dimensions—both strong connections including traditional risk analysis elements such as identity and credit record, and weak connections—to detect user needs and risks.
A large user base is making analysis models for the connections convenient and more accurate. At the Blue Whale event, a spokesperson from the finance affiliate of retail giant JD said the company was serving 400 million users. It deals with 800 terabytes of new data generated by the users per day.
Protections do exist, but at this stage, the framework serves as a roadmap for future development. According to China’s 2017 Cybersecurity Law, collection needs to be legal, justified, and necessary. It defines personal data as including but not limited to an individual’s name, birth date, and ID information.
A year after the law was implemented, a set of standards for personal data privacy was published. The standards are modeled off the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and state that data collection needs to be minimal, retention needs to be short, and usage limited. The standards don’t require compliance but could be used by government agencies to determine if firms are abiding by the rules.
Other forms of data—such as those with “weak connections” that are excluded those defined in the Cybersecurity Law—could be used to infer personal information. Known as the mosaic theory, seemingly innocuous forms of data can be combined or connected to become identifying information, an increasingly important consideration as the world enters an age of AI implementation.
Former head of Google China, Kaifu Lee refers to China as the Saudi Arabia of data. The Middle Eastern country has made a name for itself as an oil-producing giant. The lesson would appear to be that, just like oil’s detrimental effects on the world around us, data could have the same outcome on the security and privacy of user data if left unchecked.
Additional reporting: Christopher Udemans.
Clarification: This article has been updated to clarify the context of LexinFintech Vice President Shi Hongzhe’s comments. He was referring only to the technical challenges of assessing credit risks in China, where many people have no credit history.
]]>Google workers demand end to censored Chinese search project – Reuters
What happened: More than 200 Google employees, including engineers, designers, and managers, have issued an open letter to the company demanding it cease developing a filtered search engine for China. The letter raises concerns about how search data may be used to track sensitive groups. The employees said that they believed Google is no longer willing “to place values over profits.”
Why it’s important: Google has faced mounting internal criticism for its plans to relaunch its search engine in China. The company’s search app will reportedly require users to verify their identity before being able to search, and all data will be handed over to a local partner. The open letter is the latest protest against the search giant from within its ranks. In August, roughly 1,400 employees urged the company to improve oversight of ethically questionable ventures, including the Chinese search project. Most recently, John Hennessy, chairperson of Google’s parent company Alphabet, expressed his concern, saying he wasn’t sure Google’s re-entry into the Chinese search market would improve the quality of life of the country’s citizens.
]]>Chinese social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo is among around 700 apps removed from Apple’s China App Store after the latest version of the PDD app was found to contain a technical bug, our sister site is reporting.
No details have been provided indicating the nature of the bug, but the company says it has been in contact with Apple and the app will be back online after the issue has been resolved. The removal only affects buyers on the platform and not its merchant’s app. Users of numerous Chinese Android stores also remain unaffected, as well as iOS users who have already downloaded the app.
Update: The app reappeared in the App Store around 11 pm on November 27.
Pinduoduo is not the only online platform impacted by the purge. B2C car maintenance platform Tuhu, Soguo Maps, and Sogou Navigation were among those also removed. According to reports, 718 apps in the Chinese App Store were suspended.
This is not the first time this year Apple has initiated removals of this kind. In May, more than 10,000 apps were dropped, some of which were relaunched up to two days later. A vast number of these apps did not meet Apple’s standards for in-app purchases, which allow users to buy virtual goods within in-app or game.
Pinduoduo has had a turbulent year. Shortly after listing on the Nasdaq, the company found itself under investigation by Chinese regulators for listing fake goods. The news led to a spate of lawsuits in which investors claimed the company had misrepresented or concealed in its listing documents, resulting in financial losses after its share price plunged after going public.
The company responded by closing 1,000 stores and removing four million listings that it said contained fake goods. It also reported 36 companies to the market regulator in Shanghai’s Changning District.
The company has seen momentous growth in the past few years. The company claims it exceeded a gross merchandise volume of $100 million in 2017, just three years after being founded. The same milestone took Taobao five years and JD.com 10 years to reach.
]]>China’s National Health Commission (NHC) has ordered Guangdong authorities to investigate a researcher’s claims that he has helped create the world’s first genetically altered babies.
He Jiankui, an academic at the Southern University of Science and Technology in the southern city of Shenzhen, said that he altered the embryos from several couples who were undergoing fertility treatment, claiming one pregnancy has resulted so far. Lulu and Nana, twin girls, have already been born, claimed He.
He said that his goal is not to battle inherited diseases, but create immunity to HIV and AIDS. However, his research has not been independently verified or published in a journal, which would allow other researchers to verify the results through independent experimentation.
The NHC released a statement yesterday (November 26) in response to the mounting attention from the media, saying that it attached great importance to He’s research but has requested local health officials to investigate and verify his claims. It said it would deal with the investigation according to the law and promptly disclose the results to the public.
The NHC is not the only body investigating the gene-editing claims. The Shenzhen City Medical Ethics Expert Board said it would investigate the project, as its sponsors had not filed the proper paperwork. In addition to attention from regulatory bodies, He’s research has drawn the ire of academics. Over 120 scientists issued a joint statement condemning his research.
The statement came from researchers at Shanghai’s Fudan University, Xiamen University, Shanghai Jiaotong University, Tsinghua University, and Chongqing University, among others. They said that the technology already exists, but other scientists have been put off by its risks and ethical implications.
The group implored Chinese officials to enact strict regulation to ensure that gene editing is done safely and within strict ethical frameworks.
]]>Amid rumors of bankruptcy and acquisition, Chinese bike rental firm ofo has said that its system for refunding users’ deposits is functioning normally, despite increased processing times.
The company initially handled requests for refunds in up to three days, later increasing the waiting period to 10 days, and then eventually to 15 days.
“Because of the recent change of office address, some of ofo’s servers need to be migrated, resulting in a temporary extension of the deposit refund period. After the relevant work is completed, the refund deposit period will return to normal,” the company told local media.
ofo recently moved its headquarters to the Internet Finance building in Beijing, 15 minutes away from its previous office space. The company said that its rental term had expired.
ofo’s ability to pay back users’ deposits has been questioned. On Friday (November 23), ofo users who had not upgraded their deposit from its RMB 99 tier to RMB 199 tier system were presented with an in-app pop up allowing them to transfer their deposits to online loan platform PPmoney. These can then be converted to an investment within the lender’s ecosystem while allowing users to ride without a deposit. The move was criticized, with commenters saying that the company is attempting to avoid paying back deposits and selling its users to a different company.
Rumors of ofo’s cash crunch have been circulating for some time. Most recently, the company was reportedly preparing for bankruptcy after accumulating more than RMB 6.5 billion ($935 million) in debt, RMB 3.65 billion of which included users’ deposit and RMB 1.02 billion was owed to its suppliers.
ofo founder and CEO Da Wei in September removed himself from his position as the company’s legal representative as a result of mounting lawsuits from unpaid suppliers. The company has also denied that it is laying off employees en masse and that it is unable to pay its workers. Earlier this year, it halted its ambitious global expansion plan, saying it intends to focus on what it deems to be priority markets during the retreat.
]]>Tencent turns to Southeast Asia after Beijing clampdown – Nikkei Asian Review
What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent has signed a five-year deal to give Singapore-based online game-publisher Sea the right to sell its game titles in Southeast Asia. Sea previously distributed Tencent titles on a game-by-game basis. However, the new deal allows the Singapore-based company to distribute games that have not previously published in the region.
Why it’s important: Tencent’s cash cow has been gaming. However, it has run into trouble with year with increased regulation of the sector. Beijing has been cracking down on game developers and has halted the publication of new games. Earlier this year, Tencent’s profit dipped for the first time in 13 years amid the standstill. The company had previously invested in Sea and looks to expand its footprint in the region through its deal with the company amid increased regulation back home. According to a 2017 report by Niko Partners, gaming revenue in the region is set to surpass $4.4 billion by 2021.
]]>Bike rental firm ofo today (November 23) began urging its users to transfer their existing deposits in the app to online loan platform PPmoney as part of a commercial agreement with the lender, our sister site is reporting.
ofo last year increased its deposits for new users from RMB 99 ($14) to RMB 199, though existing users were not affected. Now, riders who have not upgraded to the new deposit tier have been presented with an in-app pop up prompting them to convert their RMB 99 deposit to a RMB 100 asset in the PPmomey ecosystem in order to enjoy deposit free rides. Users who do not want to take part can refund their deposits, according to the company.
PPmoney then has a 30-day lock-in period in which users don’t have access to their money. However, the company claims that once the time has lapsed, users can withdraw the deposit with interest.
ofo has been criticized for the move, with commenters saying it is selling its users and attempting to avoid paying back deposits. ofo responded by saying that it is a typical market activity and that it is limited to riders who have paid RMB 99 deposits. Users are also required to submit their ID information when opening new PPmoney accounts. ofo added that its current refund process could take up to 15 days.
Several ofo users told local media that despite the company’s 15-day refund policy they have been waiting for a refund for up to a month.
PPmoney defended the partnership by saying that the companies have many overlaps in their user base.
Rumors of ofo cash crunch have been circulating for the better part of a year. The company has been pulling out of international markets and having its global assets sold. It has faced lawsuits from suppliers claiming the company has yet to pay its debts and has been rumored to be in the midst of a takeover by ride-hailing giant Didi.
]]>
Users of Ant Financial’s Sesame Credit with a score of over 750 can now apply for Canadian visas without the need for submitting bank statements.
Sesame Credit now allows users to with high scores to receive a report containing information relating to their identity, including information about his or her finances, education, and assets, as well as contact details, from within the Alipay app. A lot of the data needs to be provided by the user, which includes information Sesame Credit may not already hold. Data related to spending and assets is that which is processed through Alipay.
Users are required to undergo a facial recognition scan to prove their identity and submit supplementary information before they can print the report to be submitted with their application.
The service is currently only available for Canadian visas, with more countries in the pipeline, but luckily due to the advancement in technology and the vast use of the internet, people from around the world can use Evisumservice een visum China aanvragen, to cut short the time spent at “Country Embassies” and other offices to apply for a visa.
Sesame Credit is an opt-in feature in Alipay that analyzes a user’s digital footprint to provide credit information. Using data provided by users and its affiliates, it ranks an individual’s creditworthiness on a scale of 350 to 950. The system functions much like a glorified rewards program for using and spending on Alibaba-owned and affiliated platform.
Platforms like Alipay and WeChat have been working to make international travel easier for Chinese nationals. Both apps allow users to apply for tax rebates while traveling or after they have returned to China. Both also offer payment services for Chinese tourists in various countries around the globe.
Earlier this year, Tencent began working with the government to provide a WeChat-based electric pass to facilitate travel between Hong Kong and the mainland.
Tencent and Alibaba have been working with the Chinese government to provide digitized access to public services. Both companies have rolled out trials for electronic IDs around the country, as well as digital health cards for use in selected hospitals in Beijing.
]]>Chinese online travel firm Tongcheng-Elong will reportedly begin trading on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange on November 26, raising approximately HK$ 1.25 billion ($160 million), our sister site is reporting.
The 143.8 million shares are priced at HK$9.8, the lower end of the range after being set at between HK$9.75 and HK$12.65 each. CMB International Capital, JPMorgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley are the lead underwriters of the IPO. The company initially aimed at a fundraising target of between $800 million and $1 billion, but later adjusted its goals.
Tongcheng-Elong filed for a Hong Kong IPO on June 21. According to its prospectus, the company’s biggest shareholders are Chinese tech giant Tencent and online travel agent Ctrip, holding 25% and 23% of its shares respectively.
The company was formed through the merger of Tongcheng Network and E-dragon Holdings (Elong) in December 2017. It says the combined monthly active users of Tongcheng and Elong totaled 121.2 million in 2017. It offers transportation ticketing and accommodation booking services through various channels including WeChat and QQ, as well as through the company’s apps and websites.
Three of 2018’s biggest IPOs have taken place in Hong Kong. Telecom tower operator China Tower, smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi, and food delivery and services platform Meituan Dianping have all listed in the city, though three-quarters of companies that went public in Hong Kong have been trading at below their offering price.
Meituan’s share price plunged by 12% this morning (November 23), the most significant drop since its IPO in September after reporting losses and disappointing investors. Like Tongcheng Elong, Alibaba-backed parenting website operator Babytree Group also missed it’s projected fundraising amount when listing in Hong Kong, downsizing from $1 billion to $217 million.
]]>China’s smartphone market is down 13% year-on-year amid its fourth consecutive quarter of year-on-year declines.
According to a report by market research firm Counterpoint Research, overall sales have not been optimistic, though Huawei and Honor saw double-digit growth compared to the same time last year. Chinese manufacturers filled the ranks the top five brands. The most popular was Vivo, taking nearly 20% of the market in the third quarter, followed by Oppo, Honor, Huawei, and Xiaomi, collectively making up 78% of the market.
Apple saw its year-on-year growth decline by 17% and made up just 7.7% of the market. The company saw sales decrease following the release of the iPhone XS and XS Max. Counterpoint says this was due to the price of the devices.
According to Counterpoint, the strong performance from Vivo, Huawei, and Honor are as a result of product innovation, which includes AI processors and the introduction of flagship-like features to cost-effective devices.
However, analysts believe this all may change in the fourth-quarter of 2018, which is seen as a time for promoting more expensive flagship devices during a host of shopping festivals. Sentiment is expected to shift from a price war to that of a battle between premium devices. As an example, Apple topped over smartphone makers regarding sales on Tmall during Double11. The company also commands 65% of the market for smartphones priced at more than $600.
Huawei, which overtook Apple in Q2 to become the world’s second largest smartphone manufacturer has begun focusing on the premium market. This is especially true in India, where the company plans to start manufacturing phones from 2020.
In April, smartphone shipments in China dropped to under 100 million for the first time since 2013. The decline was attributed to rampant imitation and intense competition, contrary to Counterpoint’s report, which associated strong performance in the top 5 brands with innovation.
]]>Research highlights class divide between ‘poor’ Apple iPhone and ‘rich’ Huawei users in China – SCMP
What happened: Chinese iPhone users are less well-off than individuals who use other phone brands, including Huawei and Xiaomi, according to research firm MobData. The company found that iPhone users are perceived to be part of a group called the “invisible poor,” those who don’t look as poor as the reality of their financial situation. The research found that most iPhone users are unmarried females who make less than RMB 3,000 ($433) a month, while Huawei buyers are usually married males who earn between RMB 5,000 and RMB 20,000.
Why it’s important: Apple usually raises the price of its iPhones every year, pushing users to cheaper alternatives. The move has driven users to buy older iPhones, such as the 6, 6S, and 6S Plus, as well as second-hand iPhone models. Apple has been struggling to get a foot up on its competitors in China, where it controls just 9% of the market. The company has reduced orders from two component suppliers in China after its slightly lower-priced iPhone XR model failed to perform.
]]>Alphabet Chairman Struggles With Google CEO’s China Strategy – Bloomberg
What happened: Alphabet chairperson John Hennessy has cast doubt on Google CEO Sundar Pichai’s plan to bring a filtered version of the company’s search engine to China. Hennessy says he doesn’t know if Chinese citizens would be better off an improved search engine if its results are restricted, asking whether it “will improve the quality of their lives.” He said that every company that does business in China compromises some of their values.
Why it’s important: There has been much speculation and even more outrage over Google’s re-entry into the Chinese search market in the past few months. Judging from reports, there is increased disquiet among the ranks of Google employees, with the company trying to suppress an internal memo detailing the project. Ethical issues aside, Google faces considerable challenges in the search market. Existing players including Sogou and Baidu hold much of the market share, which Google will have a hard time winning if it doesn’t offer something of value.
]]>Blockchain is the best mechanism currently available to deal with the problems in the supply chain, said senior advisor at Fantom Foundation Dai-Kyu Kim. His comments come at a turbulent time for the global supply chain.
Joined by EximChain CEO Hope Liu, Kim was part of a panel discussion at TechCrunch Shenzhen yesterday (November 20) focusing on blockchain’s applications in enhancing the global supply chain.
Within the tech world, the safety of core technologies’ manufacturing and distribution processes have recently been called into question with headlines of “spy chips” from compromised supply chains. Health risks also arise as a result of unsound practices, China’s recent vaccine scandal, in which 900,000 faulty inoculations were distributed around the country, is a prime example.
According to Liu, blockchain in the supply chain enables trust between individuals in the system without the need for middlemen. “When we buy something, from let’s say, South Africa, you have no idea who that person is,” said Liu. Blockchain creates a system of verification through consensus mechanisms, in which individual users of the blockchain verify the records that are created on it.
The production and distribution of materials, products, and services that are used every day are reliant on this intricate web of systems and subsystems. Despite living in an increasingly automated world, they are controlled manually, resulting in wastage and inefficiency.
“A large supply chain generates millions of emails, hundreds of hours of phone calls, and tons of paperwork,” Kim said, adding that blockchain could minimize some of these inefficiencies by using smart contracts.
But there are difficulties. Blockchain for the supply chain would need to be able to track huge numbers of items, requiring transaction volumes that run into the millions, beyond the capabilities of today’s technology.
Also, as supply chain companies adopt blockchain technologies with more frequency, so the number of blockchains will increase, giving rise to interoperability issues between the various platforms.
Kim says these issues are already being worked on. “In the third generation, blockchains interoperability is one of the key features that is being built into it. It doesn’t mean it’s going to work, but it’s going to be better than the [previous] generation blockchains,” he said.
Liu said that further experimentation should be encouraged. “Any effort in blockchain implementation, we should still encourage that because at least that’s a learning experience in what is going to be scalable and what is not.”
]]>China is home to more than 1.1 billion 4G users, accounting for 74.6 % of mobile connections according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT).
The MIIT also noted that mobile internet users—which include users of both 3G and 4G—reached 1.3 billion at the end of October.
In August, the China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC) found that the total number of Chinese internet users exceeded 800 million.
It is important to note that the MIIT numbers are not indicative of internet penetration. The large discrepancy between data published by the ministry and the CNNIC could indicate that the users to which the MIIT is referring are mobile subscriptions rather than individuals, which also includes mobile broadband and smartphone connections.
MIIT user data is usually higher than that of other bodies that measure internet usage in the country. In 2013, it claimed China had 800 million mobile internet users, whereas the CNNIC indicated that there were 772 million at the beginning of 2018. China’s internet penetration reached 57% in August this year.
Phone users are obviously opting to have voice conversations in messaging apps like WeChat. The total amount of time spent making phone calls decreased by 4.7% year-on-year. Even more drastic declines are seen when looking at fixed line telephone calls, which fell by 20% compared to the previous three quarters.
Despite the increased usage of data traffic, SMS service growth remains in the double-digits, reaching 10.6%, though mainly driven by enterprises. These messages included those for user logins and two-factor authentication. Revenue from the sector reached $31 billion, up 7.4% year-on-year.
There was no mention of the cost nor the speed of the internet connections. However, according to consulting agency We Are Social, the country’s internet speeds lag far behind its peers, coming in at 43rd in terms of mobile internet.
]]>Amid headlines of the impending arrival of autonomous vehicles (AVs) on China’s roads, Michael Shu, general manager of the Auto Intelligent Ecology Institute at Chinese automotive manufacturer BYD, says the technology should be viewed with a level head.
“We need to look at self-driving cars with a calm eye,” he told attendees at TechCrunch Shenzhen today (November 19). “Driverless cars need to become more mature, rules and regulations still need to be formulated, and ethical issues need to be solved.”
AVs have become a hot topic—especially in China. Earlier this year, the country issued a set of national standards for AV testing. Before this, regional standards had been implemented, slowing the development process. To speed up advancement, Chinese tech companies have been partnering with vehicle manufacturers. Search giant Baidu has partnered with automotive firms including BYD and Ford to develop and test self-driving cars.
China is betting that intelligent vehicles will be a vast market, projecting the industry to reach $14 billion in the next two years. China’s planning body, the National Development and Reform Commission, has issued guidelines for autonomous and semi-autonomous vehicle adoption to reach 50% of all cars by 2020.
But there are still a significant number of challenges in AV development. Shu says another major issue is data security.
“If an autonomous vehicle is hacked, the physical safety of the passengers can be compromised. Vehicles need to be more secure,” he said. He also says that the technology needs to improve.
Self-driving vehicles are categorized from Level 0 to Level 5. Most cars currently on the road are wholly dependent on their drivers to function, putting them in the first category. Level 1 vehicles include the seeds of automation with features like cruise control. US auto manufacturer Tesla’s AutoPilot, which can control the speed of the car and its steering, is an example of a Level 2 system.
Self-driving car firms are currently focusing on Level 4 capabilities, fully autonomous vehicles within certain road and weather conditions.
However, Baidu, China’s poster child of AV development has faced significant roadblocks when testing its vehicles in the US. According to data released by California’s Department of Motor Vehicles, the company’s test vehicles required human intervention when driving every 66 kilometers on average. In comparison, GM’s Cruise required “disengagements” every 7,400 kilometers and Google’s Waymo every 9,900 kilometers.
]]>Huawei sets up African cloud server – China Daily
What happened: Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei will begin offering cloud services in South Africa next year, with plans to expand further into the continent. A company representative said that South Africa will become Huawei’s base for expansion amid plans by tech giants Microsoft and Amazon to tap the market on the continent.
Why it’s important: Huawei’s cloud division is a recent entrant to the competitive cloud computing market. Since the beginning of 2018, it has launched international data centers in Russia, Hong Kong, and Thailand. The company has an international focus, with it and its partners offering services in 14 countries globally. Alibaba Cloud already has data centers in China, the US, Europe, the Middle East, Japan, Southeast Asia, and Australia, though none in Africa. Tencent also has plans to develop its cloud computing services as it focuses more on enterprises amid a crackdown on gaming in China.
]]>China to require detailed user logs from tech companies – Financial Times
What happened: Beginning November 30, the Cyberspace Administration of China announced yesterday, all online service providers with “public opinion or social mobilization capacity” should prepare to provide user information to the government. The regulation will apply to blogs, microblogs, forums, news providers, and video streaming platforms. Companies will be required to log the real names of their users, as well as logs of comments, chats, and other user data. They’re also mandated to employ systems to report such information to the government, and comply with any spot checks carried out by regulators.
Why it’s important: Chinese regulators have been taking more steps to heighten the state’s access to data collected by private companies. Earlier this month, a new regulation was imposed allowing police to enter the premises of internet-focused companies—be it information providers, internet cafes, or data centers—to collect relevant data. The newest law extends its collection abilities. The regulation effectively reduces anonymity by extending real-name verification requirements to link all online activity to an individual.
]]>Russian payment platform Yandex.Checkout has integrated WeChat Pay into its services, targeting merchants and providing a familiar payment option to Chinese tourists visiting the country.
According to a statement issued by Yandex, the company is one of the first to introduce the payment system to the Russia, which welcomes around 1.5 million Chinese tourists annually.
WeChat Pay has already been implemented by the Russian home appliance and digital electronics retail chain Citilink. Sergey Potopnin, the company’s chief financial officer, said Citilink is interested in testing QR code payments in Russia and that he believes they could spread throughout the country.
Chinese tourists have been the primary driver for payment platforms expanding abroad with both payments and peripheral services. The two dominant Chinese players in mobile payments, Alipay and WeChat Pay, have been working with tens of thousands of merchants overseas in a bid to become the provider of choice in the global payment market.
Chinese tourists made more than 130 million trips overseas in 2017, spending $115 billion. These numbers represent 7% and 5% year-on-year increases, respectively.
While just 6% of the county’s population hold passports, the total number of Chinese citizens traveling internationally is expected to rise by 200 million in the next two years.
During China’s Golden Week, the number of overseas payments made through Alipay grew significantly with destinations including Hong Kong, Thailand, and Japan taking the top spots regarding overseas transaction volume.
However, Europe saw the most growth in terms of transactions, with the total increasing 27 times compared with the previous year in Switzerland. Alipay now covers more than 110 countries and regions around the world.
Both WeChat and Alipay also offer services for international tax refunds for Chinese tourists, allowing users to apply for rebates online in various countries around the world or once they have returned home.
]]>Despite a lull in new game titles being approved, revenue in China’s gaming sector should recover by late 2019 and rebound by 2020, but gaming companies will continue to feel pressure on their profit margins, according to a report by market research firm Niko Partners
The lack of approvals comes after the State Administration of Radio and Television (SART) was formed in March to replace the State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television (SARFT), which in turn forms part of a broader push by the Chinese government to strengthen its control over cultural policies. The Ministry of Culture, which also oversaw approvals is also in the throes of restructuring.
However, the regulatory upheaval has yet to be completed and new game titles haven’t been published since March, resulting in diminishing revenue and slow growth in the industry. Niko Partners says the restructuring is due to be complete by the end of 2018, but agencies have until April 2019.
In October, Chinese regulators also limited game publication through a process known as the “green channel,” the only official way to get games on the market since the government froze new approvals. The system was introduced in August and allowed developers to run a one-month monetization trial for certain games
Chinese gaming revenue grew by 46% in 2017, but due to the regulatory shuffle, along with a crackdown on “cultural content,” just 11% year-on-year growth is predicted for 2018. Mobile gaming revenue is expected to reach $15.6 billion, 2.4% lower than projected in April. PC gaming has also been hit, with revenue anticipated to reach $15.2 billion, 3.8% lower than forecast.
In the biggest gaming market in the world, tech giant Tencent has become the biggest loser. The company has lost more than $200 billion in market value this year, in part due to the gaming crackdown. Tencent has announced its third large-scale restructuring in its 20-year history in order to focus on enterprise users, with a major push towards cloud computing.
]]>Embattled Chinese micro-lender Qudian has reportedly forced its employees to move to the southeastern city of Xiamen after relocating its headquarters from Beijing earlier this year.
At the end of September, the company told its Beijing-based employees that they would be required travel to Xiamen for two months, after which time they could return home to work in the country’s capital. However, after a month of arriving employees were informed that there was no longer an office in the country’s capital and that they could either work in Xiamen or leave the company, according to local media.
Qudian provided financial incentives for relocating and staying in the form of rental subsidies and a total of RMB 100,000 paid over a year. However, 40 people have reportedly already left. Employees are also seeking arbitration for what they deem to be unfair termination packages.
The company, which provides micro-loans to young users without access to traditional credit data, has had a troubling year since it went public on the New York Stock Exchange. Shortly after its IPO, media began questioning the sustainability, validity, and morality of its business. The lender was also accused of leaking user data after the personal information or almost one million students was found to be on sale. The data included names, addresses, phone numbers, loan size, and passwords for CHIS—the state-backed higher-education qualification verification institution in China.
In August, the company’s share price plunged after investors began to worry that Alibaba affiliate Ant Financial would not renew its partnership with Qudian, which gave the company access to potential borrowers through Alipay.
The company’s share price has fallen steadily since its 2017 IPO, dropping from $16.86 in March to $4.57 today (November 14). Its revenue for the quarter ending June 30 exceeded RMB 2.2 billion, up 124% year-on-year. It is expected to release its third-quarter results on November 21.
]]>Ucommune Raises USD200 mn D-round Funding from Major Investors – Business Insider
What happened: Chinese co-working space operator Ucommune has completed a $200 million funding round led by All-Stars Investment Limited, coming just three months after its last round. The company says the latest investment will be used to expand its global footprint, strengthen its research and development capabilities, and advance its IoT smart office technology.
Why it’s important: Ucommune has been expanding rapidly over the past year. In October it completed its seventh acquisition of the year, following successful purchases of a series of smaller competitors including Wedo, Woo Space, New Space, and Workingdom. The company now boasts 100,000 workstations in 200 co-working spaces, clocking up 800,000 working hours per day. It plans to expand its operations to include 350 offices containing 200,000 workstations in the next three years.
]]>No Leader is Secure in Cloud Computing’s Long-Haul Race in China, Kingsoft CEO Says – Yicai Global
What happened: Dominance in the cloud computing sector is a long distance race, with no clear indication of who will become the frontrunner in the future, Kingsoft Cloud CEO Wang Yulin says. He added that the sector has begun expanding into government and traditional markets and that users have shifted from being internet companies to standard businesses and government.
Why it’s important: The cloud computing sector is likely to see increased competition in the coming months given Tencent’s focus on this area of its business. In October, it announced plans to restructure, resulting in the creation of a business unit focusing on cloud computing and smart industries, along with planned investment in the billions of dollars. The move to enterprise-facing products resulted from slowing growth in its gaming division due to increased government control over content. Tencent’s shift puts it in line with Alibaba’s focus on digitizing traditional businesses. While Alibaba has a clear lead, it will be interesting to see what effect Tencent’s shift will have on the sector.
]]>China Plans to Start Researching 6G Concepts This Year, IT Ministry Says – Yicai Global
What happened: China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) plans to begin research into 6G telecommunications technology in 2020, which it claims could potentially increase download speeds to one terabyte per second. A spokesperson at the ministry believes commercialization will begin in 2030. In addition to terrestrial applications, 6G will also enable communication underwater.
Why it’s important: The US, EU, and Russia are already looking at 6G development. China won’t want to delay their research for too long given the country is pushing to be at the forefront of deployment of 5G tech. Pilot programs have been rolled out in cities across the country by the three major telcos—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom to meet this end. 6G is expected to generate business in large-market sectors including the industrial internet, drones, and gaming.
]]>Facebook launches Lasso, its music and video TikTok clone – TechCrunch
What happened: Social media giant Facebook has launched Lasso, a video app that allows users to shoot 15-second videos and overlay popular songs, taking direct aim at ByteDance’s short video platform TikTok. The app provides recommendations for videos, as well as the ability to tap through hashtags or browse themed collections. However, it is currently only available in the US on Android and iOS, unlike TikTok, which has a massive following in China through its Douyin brand (the Chinese version of TikTok), and in the West.
Why it’s important: It’s not surprising that Facebook is taking aim at ByteDance—the Chinese company’s short video app was downloaded more than Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat in October, making up 42% of downloads in this cohort of apps. ByteDance took on the US market through its purchase of teen-focused short video app Musical.ly last year. It then merged its acquisition with its TikTok brand in August. For now, Facebook is targetting this segment of TikTok’s market, but it will undoubtedly extend its reach beyond the US in time. However, Lasso does lacks a few features that are popular in TikTok, including augmented reality effects and outlandish filters.
]]>Cloud computing will become Alibaba’s main business in the future, according to Alibaba Group CEO Daniel Zhang.
Speaking to American business news channel CNBC in his first interview since being announced as the successor to Alibaba Chairperson Jack Ma, Zhang said that cloud is the company’s long-term strategy.
“I think cloud will be the main business of Alibaba in the future,” he told CNBC.
“We strongly believe that every business in the future will be powered by cloud. We are very happy to build this cloud infrastructure in the new digital era and support all the businesses going digital,” he said.
Alibaba has big plans for its cloud services. It’s no surprise given its ambition to help businesses digitize. “It’s all about how to integrate online and offline to transform to a whole digitalized commercial world,” he said.
Alibaba’s cloud computing revenue has increased by a whopping 90% year-on-year, reaching RMB 5.7 billion (around $815 million) for the quarter ending September 30. The company says it launched 600 cloud products and features relating to big data analytics and AI application innovation, security, and IoT service enhancements over the third-quarter.
In an effort to increase its cloud computing and AI capabilities, the company is also developing a dedicated AI chip. The company has also set up a chipmaking subsidiary in its pursuit of dominance in AI cloud computing applications.
“A chip is the core of computing power. If you want to apply AI in the business, it’s not only about the algorithm, but all about computing power,” Zhang said.
Alibaba may face increased competition from other enterprise-facing companies. Chinese tech giant Tencent has recently announced it is restructuring, resulting in the creation of two new divisions, including one focused on cloud and smart industries. The company also plans to invest billions of dollars in a push into cloud computing, which forms part of the overhaul.
The move to target enterprises is a result of challenges to its consumer-facing business, including increased regulation in China, leading to slow growth in its gaming division—a business that has traditionally been its biggest revenue generator.
]]>Shanghai had the highest paid couriers in China in October, with monthly salaries peaking at RMB 8,200 ($1,180) ahead of the Double 11 shopping festival, testament to the growing demand for delivery services ahead of the peak season.
The data, released by 58.com and published by the Beijing Morning Post, also shows the national average salary for couriers reached RMB 7,169, increasing by 8.5% compared to October 2017. Hangzhou came in second with its highest courier salary reaching RMB 8,019, Nanjing third at RMB 7,911, and Beijing fourth at RMB 7,489. First-tier cities exhibited the highest demand for courier services.
The data shows Chengdu had the highest increase in courier salaries, rising by 15.66 % year-on-year.
In October, China’s four major courier services YTO Express, ZTO Express, STO Express, and Yunda Express announced that they were raising prices ahead of Double 11. The companies increased their fees for packages delivered from any city to Shanghai by RMB 0.5.
However, consumers don’t necessarily feel the effects of the rising prices. The companies operate a backbone of delivery networks, with customer-facing deliveries being run by franchise partners. The result is more of a price increase for their partners and not always felt by consumers.
The increase in demand is not limited to personnel in the courier industry. A surge in online consumption ahead of the Double 11 festival has resulted in increased demand for designers and programmers. Guangzhou showed the highest growth rates, with salaries rising 42% year-on-year.
Express delivery in China is a competitive space. In addition to well-established services like SF Express, YTO Express, and ZTO Express, and others, e-commerce giants are also entering the fray. Alibaba has entered the logistics sector through Cainiao, though it takes a platform approach relying on partner couriers. Recently, JD.com, which runs an in-house logistics division, expanded its offering to include express deliveries for individuals.
]]>State-run carrier China Telecom will become the second mobile operator in China to support eSIM functionality for Apple Watches, launching today (November 9) to provide service for locally-registered phone numbers in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, and Nanjing.
China Mobile, the world’s biggest mobile operator, is the only carrier that does not offer the service in China, with China Unicom supporting use only in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Changsha, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Wuhan, and Zhengzhou, according to local media.
eSIM, or embedded SIM, allows devices without a SIM slot to access a mobile network. It also allows an additional SIM to be added to a device without the need for a physical SIM slot. The information that is usually stored on SIM card is instead kept on a chip inside a device. The chip is rewritable, allowing for SIM information to be added and removed.
In the case of the Apple Watch, the eSIM shares a phone number with its owner’s iPhone, allowing it to use the network without the paired smartphone around. The functionality is available on cellular-enabled Apple Watch models.
Chinese eSIM adoption got off to a rocky start in 2017 when the Apple Watch 3 was released. At the time, China Unicom had received a probationary license to offer eSIM services and did not pass the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s formal approval process. The carrier was unable to handle large-scale use of China’s Apple Watch Series 3 users and had to suspend the service. Apple also decided that Apple Watch Series 3 customers are eligible for a refund in China.
China Unicom later relaunched its eSIM service in March 2018.
Apple showed it had learned from the eSIM debacle when releasing new iPhone models in September. Despite almost all new iPhones released worldwide supporting dual SIM functionality—one physical SIM slot and an eSIM—the new models in China, including the XR and XS Max, allow for two physical SIM cards.
]]>Tencent executive says it will protect minors who play its games regardless of the impact on revenue – SCMP
What happened: Ma Xiaoyi, senior vice-president of Tencent, said the company would “take no account of game revenue in the protection of minors.” Speaking in an interview with Chinese media on Tuesday, Ma drew attention to the fact that minors make up a small portion of the company’s revenue, even for its hit “Honour of Kings.”
Why it’s important: Tencent has lost more than $220 billion in market value as its gaming division’s growth has slowed amid regulatory restructuring. The company has implemented increasingly strict measures to limit game usage among China’s youth. It has rolled out features including real-name verification and facial recognition to impose time limits on underage users. From next year, users of all computer and mobile-based games will be required to verify their identities against police databases. According to Tencent CEO Pony Ma, the time limits have resulted in minors spending 52% less time playing “Honour of Kings” compared to a peak in 2017. As a result of slow gaming growth, the company has announced plans to restructure and increase its focus on enterprises.
Chinese ‘gait recognition’ tech IDs people by how they walk – Associated Press
What happened: Chinese authorities have begun deploying gait recognition technology to identify individuals by how they walk and by their body shapes. The software can identify a targeted individual even when their face is obscured. Gait recognition is currently being used on the streets of Beijing and Shanghai, and it can be used in conjunction with already existing surveillance cameras. It is effective within a range of 50 meters.
Why it’s important: Chinese police already using facial recognition software around the country to identify wanted persons. However, there are limitations. The technology generally requires high-resolution cameras and the target’s face to be unobscured. According to researchers, gait recognition is harder to fool because an individual’s entire body is being analyzed. Nonetheless, the technology is still in its infancy and cannot be used in real time. Footage is required to be uploaded and then analyzed, taking about 10 minutes for one hour of video. It’s not all doom and gloom though; the software can be used in applications outside surveillance, including identifying people in distress.
]]>What happened: Chinese chipmaker Fujian Jinhua Integrated Circuit Co denied accusations it had stolen technology after the US Justice Department indicted the state-backed firm for stealing trade secrets from US semiconductor company Micron Technology. Jinhua was last week prohibited from working with US-based companies with officials citing national security concerns. In its first statement since the ban the company said it is pursuing “self-independence” and that there is “no stealing of technology from other companies.”
Why it’s important: Semiconductor development is an important goal for China in closing the gap between the country and the US in key technologies. So far, leaders in the sector are dominated by companies from Japan, South Korea, western Europe, and the US, with no Chinese firms making the top 20 companies in terms of chip sales. The US trade ban on Jinhua is similar to that which was placed on ZTE earlier this year, which nearly crippled the companies operations before it reached a settlement agreement with Washington in July. The move may stall Jinhua’s trial production of dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chips that it started earlier this year.
]]>TikTok surpassed Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat & YouTube in downloads last month – TechCrunch
What happened: ByteDance’s short video app TikTok (known as Douyin in China) has for the first time surpassed Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Snapchat in monthly installs in the US. The app made up 29.7% of this cohort of apps in September. It has since continued to increase its market share, soaring to reach 42% of downloads among the apps on October 30. The app has seen its installs increase by 237% year-on-year. However, its engagement time still lags behind its competitors.
Why it’s important: ByteDance’s 2017 acquisition of teen-focused short video platform Musical.ly is paying off. It has since merged Musical.ly and TikTok into one app, bring the entirety of Musical.ly’s user base onto Tik Tok. International expansion has been a priority for the company for some time. Earlier this year, ByteDance CEO Zhang Yiming said the company plans to have more than half of its users coming from international markets. Since then, the company has reportedly closed a $3 billion round of funding led by SoftBank, valuing it at $75 billion.
]]>Mao Zedong’s Red Flag car gets driverless makeover – Reuters
What happened: Chinese automotive manufacturer FAW Group’s iconic Hongqi, or Red Flag, car brand will launch an autonomous passenger car next year with the help of tech giant Baidu. The companies plan to produce a limited number of level four self-driving vehicles as part of a pilot, with a wider release in 2020. The cars will feature level four driving capabilities—fully autonomous within certain conditions.
Why it’s important: Hongqi has long been favored by China’s political elite, including Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping, who rode in the luxury vehicle in the 60s and 70s. The brand has recently been revived as part of a national push to promote homegrown products, releasing an electric vehicle, and soon, a self-driving car. Baidu’s partnership with the company is far from the first of its kind. Just this week, the tech giant announced partnerships with Ford and Volvo on autonomous vehicles. The Chinese government has named the tech giant one of four national champions in AI and aims to be a world leader in AI technologies, including autonomous driving, by 2030.
]]>Ford, Baidu to start self-driving road tests in China – Reuters
What happened: American multinational carmaker Ford and Chinese tech giant Baidu launched a project to test self-driving cars on roads in China. The two-year initiative will see the companies deploying cars on designated roads in Beijing by the end of the year, with the possibility of tests in additional cities in the future. The duo aims to develop level four autonomous driving capabilities, in which cars can drive themselves but only in certain conditions.
Why it’s important: China has set the ambitious goal of ensuring 50% of cars in the country are autonomous or semi-autonomous by 2020. Chinese tech giants and startups are all looking at developing autonomous driving technologies. Baidu is developing an open self-driving driving platform dubbed “Apollo” in the hope of accelerating the development of the technology. However, the company has faced its share of difficulties. In March 2017, shortly before the launch of Apollo, Wang Jin, former general manager of the company’s autonomous driving unit, announced plans to leave the company to build his own self-driving vehicle startup.
]]>In China, middle-aged and elderly people are increasingly using WeChat mini-programs for entertainment purposes, including watching videos and reading news, and photography, according to the mini program data analysis platform Aladdin.
There are now more than 60 million WeChat users between the ages of 55 and 70 years old. According to local media, many of these users learn how to use online shopping platforms through mini programs that are shared by their friends.
Mini apps are like independent apps but can be launched directly from WeChat.
Of all the WeChat users over utilizing mini programs, 22% use them for watching videos, 20% for news content, and 17% for photography, according to Aladdin’s October WeChat Mini Program Report.
Aladdin notes that the ease of mini program app usage has been improved by WeChat’s recent restructuring of its “Mini Programs Nearby” feature. In it, users can now select from different categories of mini programs, including shopping, travel, beauty, and education to identify mini programs that can be used for services within a two-kilometer radius.
A study published by Tencent’s social science research affiliate Society & Technology (S-Tech), together with a research team at Shenzhen University found that elderly WeChat users are using features other than messaging. The study showed that around three quarters of elderly users read subscription articles, while 50% of respondents used WeChat Pay functions.
Video platform iQiyi has identified the greater use of technology among the elderly and released a short video app targeting that section of the market. The company launched its Jinshi app in September. The app focuses on topics including current events and politics, health, and the military. It also allows users to switch between audio and video streams and features horizontal videos.
]]>Chinese period drama The Story of Yanxi Palace garnered over 20 billion views between July and September, driving third-quarter user growth and revenue for Baidu-owned video streaming platform iQiyi.
The 70-episode show, which was co-produced by iQiyi and Huanyu Film, follows the quest of a Wei Yingluo who enters the court of the Qianlong Emperor to find the truth behind her sister’s death. At the height of its popularity, its scenes monopolized smartphone screens everywhere from supermarkets to subway cars, with viewers enthralled by tales backstabbing concubines embroiled in games of betrayal, deceit, and finally love. The show featured elements including exquisitely detailed and colorful costumes and racy storylines.
The Story of Yanxi Palace was China’s most watched online drama for 39 consecutive days this summer. Viewers streamed it an average of 300 million times a day, generating more than 700 million daily views at its peak.
Still, China’s leading video platform remains mired in red ink, with losses widening to RMB 3 billion ($430 million) in the three months ending September from RMB 1 billion in the same period last year.
Two episodes were released daily, multiple times a week. Initially, episodes were released from Thursday to Sunday, later from Tuesday to Sunday, and eventually every day as the show culminated.
While non-paying subscribers could watch the show, the benefit of taking a subscription is early access to content—in this case, eight episodes ahead of users accessing for free. It’s unclear whether paying subscribers will continue to use the company’s paid tiered service once they finish watching shows such as these.
iQiyi’s subscribers in the period topped 80 million, up 89% year-on-year. According to the company, 98% of its users hold paid subscriptions.
iQiyi’s increase in subscribers also resulted in a 78% increase in membership services revenue—rising to RMB 2.9 billion, and a 48% increase in revenue for the company compared to the third-quarter of 2017, reaching more than RMB 6.9 billion.
The company’s hit show was distributed across 70 countries worldwide, driving its content distribution revenue to RMB 834.6 million, a 220% increase from the same period in 2017.
]]>Nick Sampson, Faraday Future (FF) co-founder and senior vice president of product strategy, has resigned amid layoffs and the company’s ongoing spat with Chinese investor Evergrande Health.
His departure follows that of Peter Savagian, senior vice president of product and technology development, who also left the electric vehicle startup this week. Tom Wessner, senior vice president of global supply chain, and Pontus Fonateus, principal of interior design and brand, quit in early October.
Sampson announced his departure on his LinkedIn page on the morning of October 31 (China Standard Time), saying that he made the decision as a result of the “devastating impact” recent events were having on the company’s employees, their families, and the “ripple effect” on its suppliers and the industry.
He said he has “regrettably” left the company with “a heavy heart,” and is “greatly saddened at what is now happening.”
“For me FF was always about the people and the team, that is what comes first in my heart, without them we have nothing,” he wrote.
Faraday Future has been embroiled in a nasty battle with Evergrande Health Industry Group, which owns 45% of the company and runs its Chinese operations. The spat and the company’s financial woes have had a mounting effect on its employees.
Jia Yueting, Faraday Future co-founder and CEO—who is himself facing scrutiny in China due to the debts owed by his company LeEco—sought arbitration in Hong Kong to cancel the $2 billion investment deal with the Evergrande subsidiary, claiming it had not upheld its end of the investment deal.
Evergrande hit back saying that Jia was looking to cancel the deal after the company had spent an initial investment amount of $800 million. Evergrande was expected to pay the balance in equal portions in 2019 and 2020. The company also accused Jia and FF of using their majority control of the board to “manipulate it.”
Instead of easing the conflict, the result of the arbitration only caused more friction. Faraday Future claimed a “decisive victory” over Evergrande after it was ruled that the company could seek outside investment. However, Evergrande said the statement was “misleading.” The Hong Kong International Arbitration Centre ruled that FF could seek future financing without Evergrande’s permission under strict conditions.
In the midst of the conflict between the two companies, FF’s employees have faced late salary payments. More than 60 of the company’s Chinese employees did not get paid on time earlier this month. The company also announced that would be laying off employees and cutting pay by 20%.
]]>China blocks mobile poker apps as online crackdown widens – SCMP
What happened: A number of Texas Hold’Em mobile gaming platform have been blocked in China. Two of the biggest include Poker King and Poker Tribe, which amassed more than RMB 50 million in bets a day. Users were required to add at least RMB 1,000 to their accounts after they registered, as well as provide their bank card or payment service information.
Why it’s important: The move is part of a greater crackdown on online content that the government deems to be “inappropriate.” The Chinese gaming industry as a whole has been affected by the government limiting approvals of new game titles. The State Administration of Radio and Television (SART) was formed in March to replace the State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television (SARFT), which in turn forms part of a broader push by the Chinese government to strengthen its control over cultural policies. The Communist Party propaganda department was then given the power to license online games. These regulatory changes resulted in the slowest first-half growth in the sector for a decade. However, the government sees the initiative as a way to battle myopia and regulate what it deems to be harmful content.
]]>Shenzhen government takes control of China’s leading chip maker Tsinghua Unigroup – SCMP
What happened: The southern Chinese city of Shenzhen will take a 36% stake in chipmaker Tsinghua Unigroup. Tsinghua Holdings, which is owned by Tsinghua Univesity, has agreed to transfer the stake to Shenzhen Investment Holdings—owned by Shenzhen’s government agency overseeing state assets. Tsinghua Holdings will retain a 15% stake after the transfer.
Why it’s important: China’s Communist Party policy formulation body released a guideline in May calling for greater supervision of school-affiliated enterprises, as well as increased separation between schools’ education and business operations. The move followed a campaign last year in which the Party’s corruption watchdog found that such companies posed “high corruption risks” and “mismanagement problems.” The government’s answer has been to transfer company stakes to government-owned investment platforms. It’s a big blow for the renowned university. Tsinghua Unigroup shipped 3.4 billion smartphone chips last year, making it the third largest mobile chipmaker in the world, according to company CEO Zhao Weiguo.
]]>ZTE’s Profit Dives 65% as It Tries to Move Past U.S. Ban – Bloomberg
What happened: ZTE’s quarterly earnings fell by 65%. The company reported a net income of just RMB 564.5 million, despite its projections of more than RMB1 billion. Revenue for the period also slid by 14% to RMB 19.3 billion. The company has lost around $17 billion in value this year.
Why it’s important: ZTE is recovering from a US ban that prevented it from sourcing American-made components. The company was forced to pay more than $1 billion in penalties to have the moratorium lifted after it violated US sanctions on Iran and North Korea. ZTE, along with rival Huawei, have been banned in Australia over national security concerns. The company has attempted to lower costs, particularly in its sluggish smartphone division. It is also focussing on emerging markets, where analysts say there is less concern about the company and more trust in China.
]]>Personal data of 9.4 million passengers of Cathay Pacific and subsidiary leaked, airlines say – SCMP
What happened: Hong Kong flag carrier Cathay Pacific and a regional subsidiary have disclosed that over nine million of their passengers had their personal data compromised in March. The breach involved data from travelers on the carrier as well as Hong Kong Dragon Airlines. Compromised information includes passengers’ names, nationalities, dates of birth, phone numbers, emails, physical addresses, passport numbers, and ID card numbers.
Why it’s important: While Hong Kong has no requirements for reporting data breaches, the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation regulations state that incidents like these should be reported within 72 hours. Failure to do so could result in fines of up to 4% of the responsible company’s annual income. Hong Kong privacy chief Stephen Wong Kai-yi slammed the company saying it hadn’t fulfilled its moral responsibility. He said that in light of recent events, he would be looking into amending the rules to ensure quicker reporting of incidents like these.
]]>A group of unidentified people broke into cryptocurrency exchange OKCoin’s Beijing office yesterday (October 23) by breaking elevators and smashing doors, according to a post by the company on Chinese microblogging platform Weibo.
OKCoin said the group threatened its staff and vandalized its office. The company called the police, who took the alleged vandals away.
Prior to the incident, OKCoin reported that a group of unidentified individuals had been hanging around its office. The company said the individuals refused to identify themselves, but they claimed that they were OKCoin users. The company speculated that they were hired to disrupt their operations.
According to 8BTC, a bitcoin and blockchain information platform, the violence is as a result of futures trading provided by the platform, in which users experienced forced liquidations and irregular transactions.
OkCoin claims to be the world’s biggest digital asset trading platform. Following China’s ban on cryptocurrency trading, the company is now based in San Francisco, California. The company lost its CEO Chris Lee in May who joined its competitor Huobi, another crypto trading company hailing from China which recently completed a backdoor listing in Hong Kong.
This is not the first time OkCoin has had an incident at its Beijing office. In March, an investor threatened to commit suicide by drinking pesticide at OKCoin’s office in Haidian after losing a total of RMB 11 million ($1.6 million), including money he borrowed from his own company’s shareholders.
OKCoin founder Xu Mingxing (known as Star Xu) has been accused of fraud and irregular account management, as well as offering false investment information and promising unachievable returns. Xu has also been accused of intentionally blowing up investment accounts in option-like OKCoin products and derivatives.
In September, Xu was summoned by the Shanghai public security organs investigating alleged fraud connected to cryptocurrency. Authorities in China have been taking illegal cryptocurrency trading seriously in recent months, banning events, removing content related to cryptocurrencies, and blocking payments to overseas exchanges.
A day prior to the break-in at the company’s headquarters, Xu published a Weibo post and criticized “some” media’s “illegal stalking” in Beijing. Media and investors were reportedly planning a stakeout outside a Marriott hotel in Beijing’s Chaoyang District, where Xu was rumored to be residing.
Xu’s team also criticized its rival Huobi for maliciously organizing attacks and reports.
ByteDance, parent company of content aggregator Jinri Toutiao and short video platform Douyin (known as Tik Tok internationally), is rumored to have closed a pre-IPO funding round valuing the company at $75 billion, reports local media.
ByteDance reportedly began financing negotiations in August. In late-September, reports began circulating claiming that the company was in talks with Softbank Group, New York-based KKR & Co., and private equity firm General Atlantic to raise $3 billion. At the time, Softbank was said to be leading the investment. However, sources now say that the amount of financing is not clear.
ByteDance is reportedly seeking a Hong Kong listing next year. In July, local media alleged that the company was pursuing a valuation of $45 billion. However, ByteDance has not publically confirmed the plans. In July, it said that it had no intentions and made no arrangments to go public.
The company has been embroiled numerous legal spats with Tencent and Baidu this year. In June, ByteDance filed an RMB 10 million lawsuit against Baidu for unfair competition. Before this, the company also took Tencent to court for blocking its content on Tencent’s WeChat and other platforms owned by the company. The move came after Tencent filed an RMB 1 lawsuit against Bytedance for damaging its reputation on the company’s Toutiao and Douyin platforms. Although Douyin wasn’t the only platform Tencent barred from its messaging apps, videos from Douyin, and others, still couldn’t be shared within WeChat after the ban was lifted.
ByteDance has also faced mounting crackdowns amidst a drive by regulators to remove “inappropriate” content from internet platforms. In April, Jinri Toutiao was ordered to better manage its content. Shortly after, news aggregation platform Jinri Toutiao had its app removed from numerous app stores in the country along apps made by local media companies Phoenix News, and NetEase News.
Toutiao was again targeted after it was ordered to permanently close its Neihan Duanzi joke app for its vulgar content. However, ByteDance later launched a Neihan Duanzi clone in August. Dubbed Pipixia, the company said the app had been repositioned regarding product design, content, and target users.
Despite the troubles at home, the company has an international focus. Tik Tok was the most downloaded non-game app in the Apple App Store globally in the first quarter of 2018. ByteDance merged its karaoke app Musical.ly with Tik Tok to form a global Tik Tok brand in August as part of its global strategy. Tik Tok had proved to be popular in Southeast and East Asia while Musical.ly was widely used among American teenagers.
]]>
Alibaba’s cloud computing arm, Alibaba Cloud, has expanded its blockchain-as-a-service (Baas) platform internationally.
The company previously offered the services to users in China but has now entered into Southeast Asian, US, and European markets.
Alibaba Cloud allows enterprise-level blockchain applications on Hyperledger Fabric, a Hyperledger project hosted by The Linux Foundation, and Ant Blockchain—developed by Alibaba affiliate Ant Financial.
Businesses use BaaS platforms to build blockchain environments and manage their development, deployment, operation, and security. The platform can be likened to those provided by a web hosting service, which handles infrastructure and maintenance issues.
BaaS uses the consortium blockchain, differing from public blockchains in that it is permissioned, meaning not everyone has access to it, and selected nodes are tasked with generating consensus.
In a statement, Yi Li, senior staff engineer and lead of Alibaba Cloud Blockchain Service said the aim is to enable companies to use blockchain in their digital transformation.
Alibaba is not the first major Chinese player to offer BaaS. In August, JD.com launched its “JD Blockchain Open Platform,” allowing enterprise clients to develop blockchain applications. Tencent and Baidu have launched similar platforms.
However, Alibaba currently holds a monopoly on blockchain patents in China. The company filed a total of 43 in 2017 alone, 10% of the global total. Its affiliate Ant Financial considers blockchain technology as one of the five key technologies—Blockchain, AI, Security, IoT, and Computing (dubbed “BASIC”)—which it believes will dominate every industry in the near future.
Ant Financial launched a blockchain-based cross-border remittance service in June, allowing users to send money between Hong Kong and The Philippines. Ant Financial said it is working with local partners to expand the service globally.
At home, China is pushing the development of blockchain technology. The local government and private sector have begun using the technology in everything from tax invoices to medical prescriptions. However, it is increasingly developing Chinese characteristics.
Recently published draft regulations could shake up the Chinese blockchain industry as a whole by requiring blockchain-based service providers to register with the government, and users to register their real names when using the platforms.
]]>Shanghai has become the first Chinese city to issue road test licenses for autonomous trucks, with autonomous truck technology firm TuSimple being permitted to operate its vehicles on public roads. The company was awarded the license on October 16, according to local media.
In March, Shanghai issued its first batch of licenses for autonomous vehicle (AV) road tests to SAIC Motor, BMW and NIO. As of the end of September, AVs had driven over 15,000 kilometers on the city’s roads.
Shanghai’s Municipal Economic and Information Committee has said that no collisions have occurred in that time and testing has not affected traffic flow in the city.
TuSimple has operations in the US and China, with Chinese R&D centers in Beijing, Shanghai, and Hebei. The company has developed Level-4 driving technologies—fully autonomous within an “operational design domain (ODD),” therefore not covering every driving scenario.
The company has been working with Shaanxi Automotive and Sinotruck to provide driverless trucks to the Chinese market by 2019.
Shanghai’s city officials initially opened up 5.6 kilometers of public roads for testing but extended this to 37.2 kilometers in September. At the time over 90 companies had applied for licenses. Vehicles are currently being tested in Nanhui and Jiading Districts.
Driverless trucks have been the focus of increasing amounts of research in China. In September 2017, JD announced that it was cooperating with SAIC MAXUS and Dongfeng Motor Corporation to roll out driverless trucks with the Chinese government. Earlier this year, Dr. He Xiaofei, former president on the company’s research division, left to set up his own self-driving truck venture.
Just months later, in May, retail giant Suning announced that it had been testing autonomous trucks in Shanghai, albeit on private roads. The company said its vehicles have also reached Level-4 self-driving capabilities.
]]>When a young mother from Chengdu wanted to return home from a visit to Beijing in May 2016, the only option she has was to travel for 20 hours in a rickety train to complete the 1,800-kilometer journey.
The woman, who told reporters her surname was Wei, had been put on a government blacklist that prevented her from purchasing certain items and services that required identification verification—including tickets for air and high-speed rail travel.
Wei, who had divorced a year earlier, had become entangled in a legal dispute with her ex-husband who, unbeknownst to her, had filed a suit against her over visitation rights to their son.
Much has been written about China’s emerging tools for social control. But few topics have garnered as much attention as the country’s nascent Social Credit System, a framework to monitor and manipulate citizen behavior using a dichotomy of punishments and rewards.
The idea is simple: By keeping and aggregating records throughout the government’s various ministries and departments, Chinese officials can gain insight into how people behave and develop ways to control them.
The goal writes Rogier Creemers, a postdoctoral scholar specializing in the law and governance of China at Leiden University in The Netherlands, is “cybernetic” behavioral control, allowing individuals to be monitored and immediately confronted with the consequences of their actions. In so doing, authorities can enhance the county’s expanding surveillance apparatus.
Some draw comparisons to the British/US science fiction television series Black Mirror and its speculative vision of the future. Others see parallels with dystopian societies penned by 20th-century writers such as George Orwell. In nearly all cases, the labels of the Social Credit System have been misappropriated.
Despite its name, it isn’t a single system, and it’s not monolithic, as many reports claim. Not every one of the country’s 1.4 billion citizens is being rated on a three-digit scale. Instead, it’s a complex ecosystem containing numerous subsystems, each at various levels of development and affecting different people.
Blacklists—and “redlists”—form the backbone of the Social Credit System, not a much-debated “social credit score.” Blacklists punish negative behavior while redlists reward positive. According to the planning outline released by the State Council, China’s cabinet, in mid-2014, the system’s objective is to encourage individuals to be trustworthy under the law and dissuade against breaking trust to promote a “sincerity culture.”
China’s Social Credit System: AI-driven panopticon or fragmented foundation for a sincerity culture?
Even so, an intricate web of social credit systems is coming to China—only perhaps not in the way, or at the speed, that’s generally expected. Many obstacles curb the implementation of a fully-fledged national system, including inadequate technology, insular mindsets among government ministries that jealously guard their data, and a growing awareness of the importance of privacy among China’s educated urban class.
The concept of a system of social credit first emerged in 1999 when officials aimed to strengthen trust in the country’s emerging market economy. However, the focus quickly shifted from building financial creditworthiness to encompass the moral actions of the country’s enterprises, officials, judiciary, and citizens.
More recently, in 2010, Suining County, in eastern China’s Jiangsu Province, began experimenting with a system to rate its citizens. Established to quantify individuals’ behavior, points could be deducted for breaking laws, but also for deviating from social norms and political positioning. Residents were initially awarded 1,000 points. Running a red light, driving while drunk, bribing a public official, or failing to support elderly family members resulted in a 50-point deduction.
The total would be then be used to assign an A to D rating. A-ratings were above 970 points, while those with less than 599 points were given D-ratings. Lower-rated citizens had a harder time accessing social welfare and government housing. More than half of an individual’s points related to social management.
Residents and the media lambasted the system, saying the government had no right to rate the country’s citizens, let alone use public services as a means of punishment and reward. To make matters worse, it was also compared to the “good citizen” identity cards that were issued by the Japanese to Chinese citizens as a form of social management during World War II. City officials eventually disbanded the A to D rating. State-run media outlet Global Times later referred to it as a “policy failure.”
Rising from the ashes of that disastrous experiment, new models for rating individuals have emerged around China. There are over now over 30 of these cities, despite there being no mention of assigning quantitative ratings in the 2014 planning outline. This highlights how the details of implementation are left to local governments, resulting in a scattered application.
In Rongcheng, Shandong Province, each of the city’s 740,000 adult residents start out with 1000 points, according to a report by Foreign Policy. Depending on their score, residents are then rated from A+++ to D, with rewards for high ratings ranging from deposit-free shared bike rental and heating subsidies in winter.
The city of Shanghai is also experimenting with social credit. Through its Honest Shanghai app residents can access their rating by entering their ID number and passing a facial recognition test. The data is drawn from 100 public sources.
Xiamen, a city in the eastern province of Fujian, has launched a similar system. Adults over 18 years old can use the Credit Xiamen official account on popular messaging app WeChat to check their scores. Those with high scores can skip the line for city ferries, and don’t need to pay a deposit to rent shared bikes or borrow a book from the library.
Jeremy Daum, a senior fellow at Yale Law School’s Paul Tsai China Center who has translated many of the government’s social credit-related documents, said that systems rating individuals—like the ones in Rongcheng, Shanghai, and Xiamen—have little effect since very few people are aware of their existence.
The scores are meant to form part of an education system promoting trustworthiness, says Daum. “This is supposed to get people to focus on being good,” he says. If punishments do occur, they are because of violations of laws and regulations, not “bad social credit,” he said.
In the 1990s, China went through a period of radical reformation, adopting a market-based economy. As the number of commercial enterprises mushroomed, many pushed for growth at any cost, and a host of scandals hit China.
In an editorial from 2012, Jiangxi University of Finance and Economics professor Zhang Jinming drew attention to the emerging appearance of low-quality goods and products and their effects on the populace. “These substandard products could result in serious economic losses, and some may even be health hazards,” he wrote.
In 2008, for example, contaminated milk powder sickened nearly 300,000 Chinese children and killed six babies. Twenty-two companies, including Sanlu Group, which accounted for 20% of the market at the time, were found to have traces of melamine in their products. An investigation found that local farmers had deliberately added the chemical to increase the protein content of substandard milk.
In 2015, a mother and daughter were arrested for selling $88 million in faulty vaccines. The arrests were made public a year later when it was announced that the improperly-stored vaccines had made their way across 20 provinces, causing a public outcry and loss in consumer confidence.
Incidents like these are driving the thinking behind the Social Credit System, Samm Sacks, a US-based senior fellow in the Technology Policy Program at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), who has published extensively on the topic, told TechNode. The idea is that greater supervision and increased “trust” in society could limit episodes like these, and in turn, promote China’s economic development.
China Tech Talk 59: China’s cybersecurity law: GDPR for the Middle Kingdom with Samm Sacks
The most well-developed part of social credit relates to businesses and seeks to ensure compliance in the market. Has your company committed fraud? It may be put on a blacklist. Along with you and other representatives. Have you paid your taxes on time? The company may be placed on a redlist, making it easier to bypass bureaucratic hurdles.
Government entities then share industry-specific lists and other public data through memorandums of understanding. This creates a system of cross-departmental punishments and rewards. If one government department imposes sanctions on a company, another could do the same within the scope of their power.
If a company were added to a blacklist for serious food safety violations it could be completely banned from operating or be barred from government procurement. Companies on redlists face fewer roadblocks when interacting with government departments.
A critical feature of the system to link individuals to businesses, explains Martin Chorzempa, a research fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, based in Washington, DC. The idea is that while companies are supervised in their market activities, executives and legal representatives are also held responsible if something goes wrong.
But it’s not just business people that can be included on blacklists, as Wei, the young mother from Chengdu, found out.
One of the most notorious blacklists is the “List of Dishonest Persons Subject to Enforcement.” Reserved for those who have willfully neglected to fulfill court orders, lost a civil suit, failed to pay fines, or conducted fraudulent activity. Punishments include bans from air and high-speed rail travel, private school education, high-end hotels, and purchasing luxury goods on e-commerce platforms. Other sanctions include restrictions from benefiting from government subsidies, being awarded honorary titles, and taking on roles as a civil servant or upper-management at state-owned enterprises.
Jia Yueting, former CEO of embattled conglomerate LeEco, also landed on the blacklist in December 2017. Six months later he was banned from buying “luxury” goods and travel for a year—including air and high-speed rail tickets. He had failed to abide by a court order holding him responsible for his debt-ridden company’s dues. Jia fled to the US in late 2017 and defied an order to return to China. He has been back in the news recently after becoming embroiled in a battle with a new investor in Jia’s electric vehicle company Faraday Future.
It is uncertain whether the government is incorporating private sector data in social credit records. However, information does flow the other way. Companies like Alibaba and JD.com have integrated blacklist records into their platforms to prohibit defaulters from spending on luxury items.
Reports claiming that the social credit scoops up social media data, internet browsing history, and online transaction data conflate the government’s systems with commercial opt-in platforms like Ant Financial’s Sesame Credit.
Despite being authorized by the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), Sesame Credit is distinct from the government system. The platform, which is integrated into Alipay, rates users on a scale of 350 to 950. Those with higher scores gain access to rewards, including deposit free use of power bricks and shared bicycles, as well as reduced deposits when renting property. It functions like a traditional credit rating platform mixed with a loyalty program. The company was not willing to comment on social credit.
Experts believe that the collection of data by the government is currently limited to records held by its various departments and entities. It is information the government already has but hasn’t yet shared across departments, says Chorzempa.
Liang Fan, a doctoral student at the University of Michigan who studies social credit, explains that he is aware of 400 sources of information, although the total number of types of data that are compiled is unknown to him.
Nonetheless, private industry is picking up on signals from the government, some implicit and others explicit. Private credit systems have been developed off the back of the government’s broader plan. The PBoC was integral in the development of these systems. Although information might not be shared, the companies are benefiting from the troves of data they collect.
The lifeblood of social credit is data. And China has heaps of it. But there are still significant threats to the development of a far-reaching social credit system. Honest Shanghai app users have reported problems ranging from faulty facial recognition tech to the app just not accepting their registration.
“The user experience is terrible. I can’t verify my real name and it failed when I scanned my face,” said one of numerous similar reviews in the iOS App Store. Many of the reviewers posted one-star ratings.
But there exists a much more entrenched problem—individual government departments don’t like sharing their data, says Chorzempa. It holds significant commercial and political value for those who control it. This creates enormous difficulty when attempting to set up a platform for cross-departmental sharing. While there is a national plan to set up a centralized system for the coordination of data, there are currently no notable incentives for sharing. In addition, creating a broader system results in more labor for individual departments, with agencies essentially taking on more work for the benefit of others.
Other challenges are societal. Reports about the proliferation of the social credit system often ignore an important factor that could hinder its overreach: the agency of Chinese individuals. There is a growing awareness of how private data is used. This was evident in the Suining experiment and could have more wide-ranging effects for social credit. “It’s not the free-for-all that it may have been even in 2014 when the social credit plan was released,” said Sacks of CSIS. “There’s been a change in ways that could make aspects of that system illegitimate in the eyes of the public.”
Real-name verification is essential for social credit. Everyone in China is required to prove their identity when buying a SIM card, creating or verifying social media accounts, and setting up accounts for making online payments, in part, is dictated by the 2017 Cybersecurity Law.
Everyday activities are being linked to individual identities with more success, reducing anonymity, says Daum. He believes that’s what the government is doing with social credit. “They’re saying: ‘First, we need a system where people are afraid to not be trustworthy. Then we need a system where it’s impossible to not be trustworthy,’ because there’s too much information on you.”
For Wei, the blacklisted woman in Chengdu, it wasn’t the prospect of an arduous cross-country rail journey that bothered her. Instead, she was fearful that her future actions and freedom could be restricted by her past record. What if, for example, her employer wanted her to go on a business trip?
In the late 1800s, British social theorist Jeremy Bentham proposed the idea of a panopticon—an institution in which a single corrections officer could observe all inmates without them knowing whether they were being watched. In the Social Credit System framework that is emerging in China, the lack of anonymity, through both real-name verification and publicly-published blacklists, creates a system of fear even if no one is watching—much like Bentham’s notorious panopticon.
]]>What happened: Computer hardware firm Supermicro said yesterday (October 22) that it would review its motherboards for malware chips, which according to a report by Bloomberg had been planted by Chinese spies during the manufacturing process in China. The company said that it was undertaking a “complicated and time-consuming” review of its products the lack of proof that the chips existed.
Why it’s important: Compromised Super Micro motherboards allegedly made their way into the servers of multiple US government agencies and 20 companies, including Amazon and Apple. Bloomberg claimed that their use would give Beijing access to internal networks. However, Supermicro has denied the claims, while Apple CEO Tim Cook has said the article should be retracted. Amazon Web Services CEO Andy Jassy joined Cook in suggesting a retraction. Analysts have said that the placement of the chips is plausible, but would result in very high costs. Additionally, every compromised motherboard increases the risk of detection.
]]>Microsoft plans incubator in Jiangxi province – China Daily
What happened: US giant Microsoft intends to locate a virtual reality (VR) and mixed reality (MR) incubator in Nanchang, Jiangxi province. The company signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with the city’s Honggutan New District at the 2018 World Conference on VR Industry on Saturday (October 20). The incubator is open to both Chinese and international firms
Why it’s important: According to the provincial industry and information technology commission, Jiangxi has already become something of a VR hub. The province has partnered with 150 companies to invest RMB 63 billion in VR and related industries. The focus is to drive the development of both hardware and software, as well as its applications. According to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, China’s VR market is expected to exceed RMB 90 billion by 2020. Microsoft has been focused on tech development in China for some time. Last month, the company announced plans to set up an AI research facility in Shanghai to develop the medtech, smart industrial park, smart home, and fintech sectors.
]]>Tencent and Huawei lead Chinese companies in building coinless ‘Ethereum-killer’ – The Next Web
What happened: Huawei and Tencent are backing a consortium that is developing the open source “blockchain ecosystem” FISCO BCOS. The platform, which will be released next month, is geared towards enterprises and is completely coinless. It is being developed by China’s Financial Blockchain Shenzhen Consortium (FISCO), whose members include WeBank, Tencent Cloud, and Shenzhen Securities Communication.
Why it’s important: The new platform seems to be specifically designed for the Chinese market. Last year, cryptocurrency exchanges and initial coin offerings were banned in China. FISCO BCOS is coinless, thereby complying with the regulations. It also features “observatory” nodes, which allow auditors to access and monitor real-time data flow in the network. FISCO seems to be positioning itself as a direct competitor to R3’s Corda—which is being used by Thailand to create a national digital currency (for banks)—and IBM, which has been doing testing on blockchain and international remittances.
]]>Evergrande Faraday has set up a company in Beijing despite continued disputes between the company’s CEO and founder Jia Yueting and Evergrande Health Industry Group, which owns a 45% stake in the company and runs its Chinese operations.
Faraday Future set up its headquarters in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou in August under the name Evergrande FF Intelligent Automotive China. The company also named Peng Jianjun, vice chairman of Evergrande Health and vice president of Evergrande High-Tech Group, its own chairperson.
It has now established an office in Beijing with a registered capital of RMB 50 million. The Beijing subsidiary—Evergrande Faraday Future Automotive Technology—was set up on October 16 and is wholly owned by its Guangzhou-based parent.
The move comes amid tense times for the company and may demonstrate Evergrande’s determination in continuing to promote its electric car business.
Earlier this week (October 16), more than 60 Chinese FF employees said they have not received their salaries and blamed Evergrande. The company responded by saying that it has not stopped salary payments, and that the 60 employees had not signed a revised labor contract with Evergrande Faraday.
FF CEO Jia Yueting sought arbitration to terminate the $2 billion investment deal with Evergrande Health, claiming Evergrande Health, which is a subsidiary of property developer China Evergrande Group, had not upheld its end of the deal.
The company agreed to take the stake in the EV firm in November 2017 through the purchase of Season Smart Ltd, which owns the FF stake. The investment brought the EV manufacturer back from the brink of financial ruin. Evergrande Health made a payment of $800 million. It also committed to paying an additional $1.2 billion in two installments in 2019 and 2020.
However, in July, FF requested an additional $700 million to pay suppliers after spending the initial amount. Evergrande Health agreed as long as FF met a number of undisclosed conditions.
Jia then sought to terminate the agreement through arbitration after payment wasn’t made, with Evergrande claiming that FF had not met the terms of the deal.
Evergrande has accused FF of trying to scrap the original deal after spending the initial investment of $800 million. The company also claimed Jia and FF used their majority control of the board to “manipulate” it. FF disputed the claims.
]]>Baidu becomes first Chinese firm to join US-based group that addresses the ethics of AI – SCMP
What happened: Search giant Baidu has become the first Chinese company to join a consortium of international firms that studies the impacts of and formulates best practices for AI. Dubbed Partnership on AI (PAI), the group has over 70 members worldwide after being established in 2016. Formed by Amazon, Facebook, IBM, Microsoft, and Alphabet’s Google and DeepMind, PAI group aims to help the public understand artificial intelligence technologies.
Why it’s important: There has been much speculation about the possible adverse effects of AI. However, the PAI credited Baidu with “vigorously promoting the development of AI technology”, while initiating programs “aimed at limiting AI’s unintended consequences”. The company is currently pursuing its AI ambitions through its open source autonomous driving platform Apollo and AI operating system DuerOS, among others. Admitting its first Chinese member is an essential step for an organization such as PAI. The country’s artificial intelligence industry has attracted most of the world’s funding, totaling 60%of all global investment from 2013 to the beginning of 2018.
]]>Millions Spent on Public Blockchains Have Yielded Few Practical Uses, Chinese Scholar Says – Yicai Global
What happened: A Chinese academic has said that there are too many public blockchains in China with few useful practical applications after venture capitalists poured money into the development of the technology. Liu Xiaolei, dean of the finance department at Peking University’s Guanghua School of Management, believes public chains can be equated to the internet in the 90s.
Why it’s important: China is pushing for widespread use of blockchain technology including private blockchains owned by specific companies. The drive comes not only from the private sector but also from the government. The country’s “fapiaos”—tax invoices that are used by employees for reimbursement from their employers—have been added to the blockchain to mitigate fraud. Additionally, healthcare providers have begun using blockchain-based medicine prescriptions. Liu believes that despite China lagging behind the US technologically, the country could create more usage scenarios, including information sharing between public institutions, which traditionally hoard their data.
]]>Google CEO says China search engine would serve 99 percent of queries, takes a swipe at Baidu – SCMP
What happened: Google CEO Sundar Pichai publicly addressed the company’s plan to re-enter China with search and news products for the first time. Speaking at Wired’s 25th-anniversary summit in San Francisco, Pichai said that the company would be able to service 99 percent of all queries. He said China is an important market for the search giant given its size and took a swipe at Baidu by saying Google could compete with local players.
Why it’s important: Project Dragonfly, the codename for the proposed filtered version of Google’s search engine specifically engineered for use in China, has caused protests both inside and outside the company. Google tried to suppress an internal memo written by an employee that detailed how some aspects of the service would work. Google now seems to be framing the move as an opportunity for information sharing, with Pichai telling US lawmakers that it “would have broad benefits inside and outside China.” However, the extent of what is being shared is the problem—the search engine reportedly requires users to log in to perform searches, keeps track of their location, and then relays the data to a local party with “unilateral” access to it.
]]>U.S. lawmakers warn Canada to keep Huawei out of its 5G plans – TechCrunch
What happened: US senators have sent a letter to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau advocating for the exclusion of Huawei from the country’s 5G plans. The lawmakers warned Trudeau to “reconsider Huawei’s inclusion in any aspect of Canada’s 5G development, introduction, and maintenance,” due to security concerns and links to the Chinese government.
Why it’s important: Last month, the head of the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security—the federal agency tasked with addressing cyber threats—dismissed claims that Huawei posed a threat to the country’s national security. However, the US recently signed off on a new law that prohibits government agencies from using Huawei and ZTE’s services and hardware. Australia has also moved to block the companies from its own 5G deployment. US lawmakers warn that by making use of infrastructure built by companies close to the Chinese government, countries that make up the “Five Eyes” intelligence-sharing network—the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand—could be giving a foreign power access that they otherwise would not have had.
]]>China’s central bank recruiting cryptography experts to help develop its own digital money – SCMP
What happened: The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has begun hiring cryptography experts as it eyes developing a digital currency. The bank’s Digital Currency Research Institute started advertising jobs on Wednesday as part of its annual hiring push for 2019. The postings included positions for those who specialized in computer science, cryptography, or microelectronics. The advertised positions will focus on the research and development of software, chips, and encryption for digital fiat currency.
Why it’s important: China banned cryptocurrency exchanges and initial coin offerings (ICOs) in 2017, but it has been working on a homegrown digital currency for the past four years. However, this is the first time it has advertised jobs for cryptographers. The PBoC hopes the currency will make transactions cheaper and easier to trace. The central bank has yet to give a timeline for its development, but its former chief has pointed out that the transition and its usage should ensure financial stability and customer protection.
]]>Indian augmented reality (AR) startup Tesseract has been crowned victor of Asia Hardware Battle (AHB) 2018, taking the top spot in a highly competitive grand final that took place in Shanghai’s Yangpu District on Wednesday (October 12).
AHB received over 600 applications from across nine countries in Asia. Organized by TechNode, the competition had pitching events in Malaysia, Korea, Japan, Indonesia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, China, and India. Just 15 startups made it to the finals in Shanghai.
Judges included Dr. Markus Seidel, head of BMW’s technology office in China; Andrew He, general manager of Bosch Smart Life Technology China; Anna Arnt, brand manager of partnerships and innovations at Volkswagen Group China; Paul Wong, VP of Emporium; and Chen Xin, general manager of Taobao Crowdfunding.
Judges assessed the startups on innovation, functionality in the market, business value and potential, sustainability of growth, technical breakthrough and innovation, and innovative design elements.
India’s Tesseract developed the Holoboard, a modular AR headset that works with any smartphone. The company makes use of its optical design and AI-enabled spacial tracking software to provide a cross-platform, multi-user holographic experience. The Holoboard uses a smartphone’s front camera along with Tesseract’s software to place a hologram in any location. The Holoboard also comes with hand-tracking and scene understanding modules that allow gesture interactions and integration with the physical world.
Singapore’s EcoWorth Tech aims to transform liquid waste into reusable materials while protecting the environment. The company has commercialized “Carbon Fibre Aerogel” that was developed at the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. The material has applications in cleaning up oil spills and be integrated into already existing filtration systems. With the ability to absorb up to 190 times its weight, the sponge-like material can be re-used, and absorbed materials can be sold to create value.
Japan’s Triple W provides a device that uses ultrasound to predict toilet use and timing among individuals with incontinence. The company hopes the device will help those who have difficulty going to the toilet to gain more independence, reduce labor costs at nursing homes, and cut down on adult diaper expenditure. The company provides the device to both businesses and consumers and is focussing on the senior market.
Shenzhen’s Roborn Dynamics develops robots that can be controlled via motion detection. The company’s latest humanoid ME series robot can be controlled by moving your hands and fingers. The robots have a wireless range of 2km, with applications in bomb disposal. Roborn is also developing the first 5G robots in China.
Over 700 Chinese iPhone users have inexplicably had money deducted from their Apple ID-bound payment channels, with the highest being RMB 10,000 ($1,440), according to local media.
Alibaba-owned Alipay, whose users were also affected, said that some Apple IDs were stolen, resulting in financial losses. The company reached out to Apple to find out the reasons for the theft, with Apple responding saying that it is addressing the situation.
Some users received Alipay notifications informing them that purchases had been made in the App Store and Apple Music. The stolen funds were used to purchase lesser-known games and in-app purchases, as well as subscription services. The total amount of money taken varies from a few hundred to RMB 10,000.
Other payment channels that can be bound to an Apple ID include WeChat Pay, debit card, and credit card.
Records show that some users’ Apple IDs were used to log into devices other than their own to make purchases. Nonetheless, some users who have attempted to apply for refunds through Apple have been told that reversing the purchases is not possible, even after one user requested assistance from the Shanghai Consumer Protection Committee.
While incomplete numbers show that over 700 people were affected, it is possible that this total is higher.
Data security has become an increasingly significant issue in China in the past few years. The country has surpassed the US as the biggest creator of digital data in the world. This can be attributed to the rise of the digital economy and more specifically, online-to-offline (O2O) service platforms that collect data from the internet and offline world.
Most recently, police from Wuxi, Jiangsu Province uncovered a sophisticated network of data brokers that show how complex operating structures are being used to evade law enforcement. The group reportedly trades over RMB 1 million in personal data each data, with members moving to Southeast Asia to avoid capture and punishment.
]]>Police from Wuxi, Jiangsu Province have uncovered a sophisticated network of underground data brokers trading personal information to the tune of RMB 1 million a day.
According to local media, police have arrested 113 individuals that form part of the network. The group shows how criminals are building complex operating structures to avoid being caught.
The sources of personal data include hackers and others who use deception to encourage individuals to expose their personal details. Most worryingly, the sources are also corporate personnel who steal the data. These corporate players have access to vast amounts of data that would otherwise be unattainable, including that of consumption and insurance.
However, it is the organizational structure of the network that is of most interest. The group is distributed across China and abroad—the investigation led police to Guanxi, Hunan, Shanxi, Anhui, and Myanmar.
There is also a complex web of middlemen. Customers contact the lower tier middlemen and provide them with an individual’s basic information, including names and phone numbers. After payment is made, these details are passed up a chain of other intermediary parties, landing up at those close to the source of the information. Sources can then provide location data, bank balances, credit information, property details, and familial information.
Information that has been obtained is used for activities including communication network fraud, taking out microloans, and violent debt collection.
According to a representative at Wuxi’s Public Security Bureau, the network trades hundreds of thousands of pieces of personal information, and the number of people and the complexity of their distribution and organization is rare. The middlemen, which form the backbone of the operation, are also moving overseas—particularly to countries in Southeast Asia—to avoid capture and punishment.
Despite increasingly strict regulations and standards to protect personal information, it is still widely available. In the past year alone, numerous high-profile data breaches have made headlines. From Apple employees stealing iPhone user data to hackers taking advantage of mobile network vulnerabilities, personal data is chronically being targeted.
This information has also become extremely cheap. Earlier this year, an investigation found that personal data from food delivery platforms was up for sale for as little as RMB 0.1o. Suppliers got the information by using software to siphon off the data from the delivery systems.
]]>Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing will begin trialing a feature on October 18 that will allow passengers and drivers to blacklist each other, marking the latest in a series of upgrades to its security features.
The blacklisting function (in Chinese) will be accessible when canceling an order, as well as through the driver evaluation and complaints pages. Should one party decide to block the other, the driver and passenger will not be matched for 12 months.
Didi says that once an individual has been put onto a blacklist during the trial period, they cannot be removed.
The company has faced increased scrutiny following the murders of two women using the company’s Hitch service this year, as well as a string of sexual assaults. The latest incident, which occurred in August, was met with outrage online. Didi users began posting photos of themselves deleting the company’s smartphone app. It also resulted in increased downloads of apps that facilitate video calls to police.
China’s Ministry of Transportation published a commentary censuring Didi for its failure to offer effective preventive measures as well as urgent help during the incident, saying the company only tried to solve the problem with pricy settlements. The company was also summoned by authorities in ten cities around the country, which required it to implement or improve safety features.
Didi originally included an emergency button, itinerary sharing, and trip recording feature in July 2016. Since then, the company has enhanced its emergency button by making it more accessible and allowing users to instantly call the police. The company also added mandatory safety knowledge tests for drivers and more stringent facial recognition tests.
However, Didi was criticized by state media in September for advertising its in-app panic button as being “one click to call the police,” when the feature requires at least two taps. At the time, the company responded to TechNode, saying: “We are exploring ways to tackle external constraints and have the trip information sent to police automatically through partnerships with law enforcement agencies.”
]]>Chinese microblogging platform Sina Weibo processed more than 6000 pieces of fake information and published 159 messages fact-checking posts in September, according to a report by the company.
The report, released yesterday (October 10), contains data from the platform’s rumor reporting channels, which allows users to reports instances of potentially fake information.
Users reported rumors more than 2000 times a day, hitting a peak on September 16, which coincided with a post refuting the mistreatment of Chinese tourists in Sweden. The event occurred when a family arrived at a hostel in the country earlier than their reservation. After not being permitted to stay in the hostel’s lobby, they were removed from the property by police.
The post claims that after the family caused a scene after being treated harshly by Swedish police, they continued their holiday as if nothing had happened, thereby disputing the authenticity of their claims. The user attached a photo in which two family members can be seen smiling next to a canal. Weibo disputed the claim, saying the photo was taken in The Netherlands and not in Sweden, and closed the user’s account.
Another popular post that was reported claimed that the United Nations published a study ranking China second last globally regarding ethics.
Amid greater government scrutiny, online content platforms are taking a more active role in policing posts. Numerous services have announced “clean-up” campaigns in order to comply with increasingly laws and regulations that govern content on the internet.
In April, Weibo responded by announcing plans to crack down on themes relating to homosexuality. However, the move prompted a storm of online protest, which caused them to reverse the decision.
The platform has also said it will block the registration of users under 14 years old from November 1, with plans to develop a child-friendly version of its service.
]]>Huawei commits to ‘huge investment’ in top AI talent with eye on the long-term benefit —SCMP
What happened: Chinese telecommunications and smartphone giant Huawei says it will continue investing heavily in AI manpower, even if that means added costs. It said that the long-term payoff of AI development would be worthwhile. A representative from Huawei noted that despite the cost pressures, benefits like improved efficiency would lead to even higher profits.
Why it’s important: China hopes to become a leading force in the development of AI by 2030. The country is already the largest generator of data in the world, primarily driven by the now commonplace O2O services users utilize every day. However, acquiring new AI talent is a focus for the country’s big tech companies. According to Huang Weiwei, a senior management consultant at Huawei, the company has already managed to reduce manpower through autonomation and AI. A quarter of its staff has been eliminated in its technology services department as a result of increased efficiency, according to Huang.
]]>Experts question whether China has technical know-how to pull off chip hack – SCMP
What happened: Chinese technology experts have expressed their doubts about China’s capabilities in pulling off a spy chip hack as detailed in a Bloomberg Businessweek report last week. Chinese manufacturers were allegedly able to install microchips on Super Micro Computer motherboards that were later sold to be used in the servers of 30 US companies, including Apple and Amazon. However, experts have said that it would be near impossible for the country to incorporate all the required components onto a chip as small as the report alleges.
Why it’s important: Chips are a key part of the country’s “Made in China 2025” initiative. However, an increasing number of commenters have expressed doubts about China’s general technological prowess. In June, Chinese media outlets were ordered to downplay reporting on its technological development drive. The order coincided with Liu Yadong, editor of the Science and Technology Daily, saying authorities had been fooled by the hype surrounding China’s achievements. However, these comments may also have ulterior motives, whether it be trying to diffuse a trade war or mitigate possible fallout in the event of a high profile hack, all of which should be taken into consideration.
]]>Apple tells Congress it found no signs of hacking attack – Reuters
What happened: Apple’s top security chief, George Stathakopoulos, told Congress in a letter yesterday (October 8) that the company had found no evidence of suspicious transmissions or that it had been penetrated by China through an attack on its supply chain. The company denied claims that servers sold to the American tech giant by Super Micro Computer Inc contained chips that allowed backdoor transmissions to China.
Why it’s important: Last week, news broke that Super Micro Computer Inc allegedly had its supply chain compromised by its Chinese manufacturers. According to a Bloomberg Businessweek report, tiny chips were installed on the company’s motherboards, compromising the hardware. The attack reportedly affected 30 US companies, including Apple and Amazon. However, the companies, along with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), have denied the claims. Whether the report is accurate or not, it won’t do any favors for Chinese tech companies operating internationally.
]]>U.S. to counter Chinese internet bid in Papua New Guinea: diplomat – Reuters
What happened: The US aims to limit Huawei’s operations in Papua New Guinea by working on a counteroffer to the company’s proposed plan to build internet infrastructure for the Oceanian nation. U.S. Charge d’Affaires in Australia James Caruso said on Australian Broadcasting Corporation radio that the aim is to provide an alternative, not to say: “Don’t do business with China.”
Why it’s important: Islands nations in the Pacific are of particular strategic interest to both the US and China, as they each have votes in forums like the United Nations. In 2016, Huawei announced that it would build a network of submarine cables linking 14 towns in Papua New Guinea. But the influence of the Chinese government through the country’s tech companies has observers worried. Most recently, Eric Schmidt, former chairperson of Google’s parent company Alphabet, predicted that China would split the internet through the installation of infrastructure as part of its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). In this way, the country could control and monitor the flow of data being transferred in its cables.
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The Jiangsu Provincial Government will begin issuing electronic marriage licenses through Alipay for couples whose nuptials are registered in the province, according to local media.
The move is part of an update to the provincial government’s Alipay mini-program, “Jiangsu Government Affairs”. Users are required to search for the mini-program in Alipay and scan their faces to verify their identity in order for it to be issued.
The system aims to increase convenience for individuals wanting to not only prove their marital status but also for those wanting to take out a mortgage, demolish a property, and transfer real estate, among others.
This is not the first time Alipay has created electronic services relating to marriage. Two years ago, it included a function to facilitate marriage appointments in its “City Service” mini-program.
Initiatives like this help local government digitize, which they hope will not only increase convenience but also improve the integrity of personal data. In April 2018, the government in Jiangxi province issued the first batch of ID chips for smartphone users. The smart chips, dubbed SIMeID, attach to the phone’s SIM card and can store sensitive identifying information for safer verification over the internet.
China’s tech companies have caught onto this trend and have begun offering increasing numbers of government services on their various ecosystems, with Alibaba and Tencent leading the charge.
Alibaba is currently trialing its Alipay-based digital IDs in Hangzhou and Quzhou in Zhejiang province, and Fuzhou in Fujian province. The virtual IDs allow their users to book train tickets and check into hotels but are only accepted by local authorities.
Tencent began issuing ID cards though WeChat in December 2017. The cards were first provided in the southern city of Guangzhou. In August, telecommunications giant and smartphone manufacturer announced the launch of a pilot for its own electronic ID (eID) that is stored on the security chip within Huawei phones.
But the focus is not only on digital IDs. Tencent has been working with the health authorities in Beijing to create electronic health cards for residents. As part of the pilot, patients at Peking University Hospital and Beijing Friendship Hospital can benefit from the service. The company is also collaborating with the government to provide a WeChat-based e-pass that would make travel between Hong Kong and mainland China easier for Chinese citizens.
]]>Tencent’s popular mobile multiplayer hit “Honour of Kings” (known as “Arena of Valor” outside of China) is about to get another update to its supervision system, this one more imposing than the last.
Starting today (September 29), new players in Shenzhen and Beijing will be selected at random to undergo video facial recognition authentication as part of a pilot aimed at testing the viability of widespread use.
Earlier this month, the company began enforcing real name verification for all players. The upgrade connected the platform to China’s public security database, which the company claimed would allow it to better enforce the rules and limit the amount of time minors can spend playing.
The system stops those who do not verify their identity from logging in. Children under 12 years old are limited to playing one hour a day between 8 am and 9 pm. Minors over 12 are restricted to two hours a day. Individuals awaiting approval are subject to the same limits imposed on those under 12 years old.
The company claims the facial verification pilot is attempting to further increase its ability to crack down on excessive gaming by minors. Now, visual information captured by a user will be compared to government-held identity data.
Tencent has faced increased scrutiny in the past few months for its perceived contribution towards gaming addiction among China’s youth. In June, Party mouthpiece People’s Daily blasted the company, referring to “Honour of Kings” as “poison” and said greater regulation of social games is needed.
Tencent also imposed spending limits within games. It introduced a feature in July that notifies account holders when a suspected minor’s in-game spending reaches RMB 500 a month, also creating greater parental controls.
But increased oversight of game publishers is not limited to Tencent. The Communist Party’s propaganda department has taken over licensing new online games. As a result, approvals of new titles have slowed amid the restructuring, with no new licenses being approved in the past six months.
The industry as a whole has suffered financially as a result. This first half of this year saw the industry’s slowest growth in ten years. Tencent was not immune to the slowdown. Its second-quarter profits fell for the first time since 2005, in part, due to the removal of popular titles from its distribution platforms. The company was forced to stop selling blockbuster “Monster Hunter: World” from its WeGame platform—wiping out $15 billion from its market value— and shut down its popular poker game “Texas Hold’Em”.
]]>Chinese mobile internet company CooTek (触宝)—the firm behind virtual keyboard TouchPal—has 180 million users in 240 regions and countries around the world, chairperson Zhang Kan told employees in an open letter this week.
Zhang made the comments ahead of the company’s listing on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) yesterday (September 28), reports local media (in Chinese). However, he did not go into detail about how the number of geographical locations was measured.
CooTek filed for its US listing last month, initially hoping to raise $100 million. However, the company priced its shares at the low end of its range and raised $52 million. Additionally, its shares were trading 18% lower than their opening price of $11.50 at the end of its first day on the NYSE.
The company said it has 132 million daily active users (DAUs), a 75% increase compared to last year. The company’s primary revenue source is mobile advertising. It also claimed to have seen 453% total ad revenue growth in the first six months of the year.
Founded in 2008, the company took an international approach from its inception. 95% of the company’s users are outside of China. While it believes keyboards may not be “sexy” tech, they are something that all owners of smartphones use. Its TouchPal keyboard includes a glide feature, error correction, predictive typing, and a personal assistant, and is available in over 80 languages. The keyboard has 125 million DAU and 171 million monthly active users (MAUs), according to the filing.
“The more we developed innovative keyboard features, the more we believe it’s related to AI, natural language processing and how the machine can understand and see the world,” Michael Wang, CEO and co-founder of CooTek told attendees at TechCrunch Hangzhou in July. In line with this, the company says it intends to use its IPO financing to develop these technologies in the future.
CooTek also offers a range of other apps that cover fitness, healthcare, and gaming. Combined, these products have 7 million DAUs and 22 million MAUs.
]]>Google’s privacy chief confirms existence of ‘censored Chinese search engine’ Project Dragonfly – SCMP
What happened: Keith Enright, Google’s chief privacy officer, confirmed to US lawmakers that the company’s filtered search engine for China exists, but said he did not have details about the scope of the project. The executive made the comments in a Senate hearing on Wednesday, adding that any product the company launches will reflect its values and commitment to its users.
Why it’s important: The company has faced mounting resistance within its ranks since the project was made public last month. Most recently, employees were reportedly requested to delete an internal memo written by an engineer who was asked to work on the project, which included details about how user data will be handled. The search app, which is said to be linked to a users phone number—and, in turn, to their identity due to real-name verification requirements—will exclude search results deemed sensitive by the Chinese government, but will also share search histories with a Chinese partner which would have “universal access” to the the data, details a chief privacy officer should know.
]]>China shuts down American-listed news site Phoenix New Media over ‘illegal’ coverage – SCMP
What happened: The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) has ordered Phoenix New Media’s news portal ifeng.com to shut down its technology channel for a month and suspend its general news, financial news, mobile website, and app for two weeks. The internet regulator said the site had “disseminated illegal and harmful information, distorted news headlines and shared news information in violation of rules”, and ordered it to undergo “thorough and in-depth rectification”.
Why it’s important: Online content providers, including news services and entertainment platforms, have faced increasing scrutiny from government departments. Short video platforms have been targeted for hosting “inappropriate” content in an effort to increase government controls over cultural content. ifeng.com’s suspension comes a week after CAC chief Zhuang Rongwen promised to further extend control over online spaces, saying “positive energy” should be promoted, while “negative elements” should be suppressed.
]]>Tencent’s WeChat Pay set to allow Hong Kong users to pay for purchases on the mainland —SCMP
What happened: WeChat Pay users in Hong Kong may soon be able to make purchases on the mainland. Tencent’s WeChat Pay HK service was previously only available for use in the city as the two payment systems—one on the mainland and one in Hong Kong—are not interoperable. However, according to sources, an update to this system is set to be announced today (September 26).
Why it’s important: Both Tencent and Alibaba are pushing outside of mainland China to gain additional users. While this has previously focused on allowing Chinese tourists to pay abroad, WeChat has launched a localized version for Hong Kong and more recently, for Malaysia. It will be interesting to see if Alipay follows suit. The company has previously mentioned its desire to offer a similar solution.
]]>China splits the internet while the U.S. dithers – TechCrunch
What happened: Eric Schmidt, former chairperson of Google’s parent company Alphabet, predicts that the internet will be split in half, with one side being led by China and the other by the US. Speaking at a private event in San Fransisco, he said that the percentage of GDP generated by the internet in China is greater than the percentage generated in the US, and drew attention to the increasing scale of Chinese companies, which have begun moving abroad.
Why it’s important: Google’s search business is rumored to be re-entering the Chinese market, though results will be filtered. The news drew the ire of the company’s employees and the general public. Additionally, Schmidt highlighted the possibility of Chinese digital hegemony that could be achieved through its Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) by the installation of internet-related infrastructure. In this way, the Chinese internet, firewall and all, could be exported to other counties around the world.
]]>Germany mulls fund to fend off Chinese tech takeovers: source – Reuters
What happened: The German government is looking at changing regulations to limit Chinese acquisitions of the country’s tech companies. It is also seeking to create a fund to rescue firms in financial trouble to ensure that critical technologies are not exported. The changes would include creating a system of government reviews of foreign acquisitions and expanding the types of purchases that would need to be examined.
Why it’s important: China has often been criticized for using its deep pockets to acquire new technologies, rather than developing them itself. Germany isn’s the first company to investigate creating limitations like these. In June, the US Treasury Department began drafting rules that would block firms with at least 25% Chinese ownership from buying US firms that develop “industrially significant technology.” There is an increasing awareness of Chinese companies’ abroad, for reasons including national security, IP protection, and in the case of ZTE, not playing by the rules.
]]>Robots hold an increasingly ubiquitous presence in China. Whether it be on an assembly line, in restaurants, or at a bar, our progressively intelligent companions are becoming part of daily life. Now, Alibaba wants them to take on hotels and hospitals.
Miffy Chen, general manager of Alibaba’s AI Labs, unveiled the company’s Space Egg and Space Shuttle service robots, the former designed for use in hotels while the latter has applications in medicine delivery. The announcement was made at the Cloud Computing Conference in Hangzhou, today (September 20).
While many fear that intelligent robots are a threat to their livelihood, Alibaba believes the robots could reduce to the workload of individuals in the hospitality and health sectors. At the event, Chen said that the company hopes to increase efficiency in the hospitality industry, adding that she believes the next three decades will result in huge disruptions in the robotics industry.
The robots are able to navigate autonomously and include multiple sensors that make them capable of avoiding collisions, understanding their environment, identifying individuals, controlling elevators, and comprehending features including room numbers.
The Space Egg is capable of carrying up to 30kg in its internal cavity, allowing it to deliver food and pick up and drop off laundry at a hotel guest’s room. The Space Shuttle can contain up to 60 compartments for medicine, and it understands gestures and voice commands.
The intelligence behind the robots, AliGenie, is the same that powers the company’s Tmall Genie smart speaker.
On the sidelines of the conference, Alibaba told TechNode that the Space Shuttle also has applications in supermarkets, where it could be used to transfer goods around the store. Additionally, the robots can be customized according to a business’ needs. Both internal cavities and the robots’ exterior can be changed according to budget and purpose.
This is not the company’s first foray into the robotics sector. In 2016, the company unveiled its humanoid robot Pepper, which was touted as being able to scan passengers’ ID card and print their boarding passes at the airport. This year, the company’s logistics arm Cainiao showed off its autonomous guided vehicle (AGV) and autonomous arms that are used to sort goods in its warehouses.
According to the International Federation of Robotics, the usage of service robots is on the rise, with the market’s growth expected increase from 20% to 25% from 2018 to 2020. At the same time, the sales forecast for the same period in the professional service segment will exceed $27 billion.
]]>China to invest $15 billion in big data, cloud computing over next five years – Reuters
What happened: China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has reached an agreement with the China Development Bank to invest RMB 100 billion in big data and cloud computing over the next five years, aiming to support China’s “digital economy.”
Why it’s important: China is looking to become a world leader in technological development. Its leaders also have ambitions for the country to become an innovator in the field of artificial intelligence by 2030. Investments in big data and cloud computing could be crucial to achieving this goal. In addition to financing, the country is filing a massive number of patents, especially those related to blockchain, with the People’s Bank of China and Alibaba leading the charge.
]]>China is trying to become an innovation hub in the autonomous vehicle sector—it is currently working on a draft bill mandating that 50% of all vehicles sold by 2020 be autonomous or semi-autonomous. Cities across China have opened up their roads for testing autonomous vehicles (AVs), with localities including Shanghai, Chongqing, Beijing, and Shenzhen setting up designated pilot areas.
China’s big three tech giants—Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent—are all competing for dominance in the self-driving space. Additionally, startups looking to develop their own self-driving platforms have sprung up. While all of the nascent frameworks are highly disparate, they all require on-vehicle sensors.
However, Wang Gang, chief scientist at Alibaba AI Labs, believes the future lies not in cars being equipped with sensors, but the roads themselves becoming active participants in the sensing process.
Wang says on-vehicle sensors have restrictions. “There [may be] some obstacles that are blocking your vision,” said Wang at Alibaba’s Cloud Computing Conference in Hangzhou today (September 20).
“There may be blind stops. Some obstacles on the road may not be visible.” These limitations, created due to sensor placement, could create serious safety issues, he says.
In addition to safety issues, cost is also a concern. Usually, individual vehicles need to be equipped with image sensors in the form of cameras with a 360-degree field of view, radar, and LiDAR, which measures distances to moving and stationary vehicles. As a result, Wang says that AVs are prohibitively expensive, costing up to $200,000.
He says the answer is smart infrastructure, a system that uses “coordinated intelligence” to give a broader view of conditions on the road, with sensors, as well as vehicles, being connected. He explains that sensors can be placed in elevated positions above roadways, with cars and sensors forming a network to improve road safety. Because the sensors are stationary, they can “more accurately sense what is happening” on the roads, according to Wang.
“Even if it is static, it can know what is happening kilometers away,” he said.
Alibaba has already begun developing such a system. It has created “perception stations” that can be mounted above roads to provide sensing capabilities vehicles below. The platform, dubbed Cooperative Vehicle-Infrastructure Systems (CVIS ), aims to create a system like the one Wang proselytizes.
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This year, China’s reliance on foreign technology was once again brought into the spotlight. While the country first began to ruminate over its dependence on international tech in 2013, Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE has brought the discussion to the fore.
After the company was found to have violated US sanctions on Iran and North Korea, it was banned from sourcing components from American manufacturers, which provided the majority of its chips. The ban has subsequently been lifted, but the collective contemplation remains.
Chinese tech companies have now begun announcing a slew of homegrown chips. From Bytedance—the owner of popular content aggregator Jinri Toutiao—to Alibaba. the Chinese chip industry has seen rapid development.
The latter has now set up a subsidiary to focus on chips. Alibaba Group chief technology officer (CTO) Jeff Zhang made the announcement at the company’s Cloud Computing Conference in Hangzhou today (September 19).
In April, the Hangzhou-based tech giant announced its neural network chip, the Ali-NPU, to be used in AI applications, such as image video analysis and machine learning. The company said its chip would be ten times faster than mainstream AI chips based on CPU or GPU architecture. The company plans to release the chip next year.
The new subsidiary, called Pingtouge (平头哥), is being formed by the company’s research and development unit DAMO Academy and Alibaba-owned chipmaker C-SKY Microsystems (中天微), which it acquired shortly after announcing the Ali-NPU.
Zhang also mentioned Alibaba’s interest in working on a quantum computing lab as well as quantum chips. In February, Alibaba teamed up with the Chinese Academy of Sciences to launch a quantum computing service on the cloud offering ten qubits. The company is seeking to compete with local rival Baidu, as well as international competitors IBM, Google, Microsoft, and Intel.
Numerous other tech companies have joined the call to develop homegrown core technologies. Last month, appliance manufacturer Gree established a wholly-owned subsidiary focussing on chip development. The company said that the new subsidiary will be focusing on chip design for Gree’s key products such as air conditioners.
Rokid, a Hangzhou-based startup which specializes in robotics research and AI development, unveiled its voice-focussed Kamino18 AI chip earlier this year. The chip was in development for two years, and power consumption among equipped devices can be reduced by 30% to 50%, according to the company.
Nonetheless, Alibaba has made already made numerous investments in several chip companies, including China-based Cambricon (寒武纪), Kneron (耐能), ASR (翱捷科技), and DeePhi (深鉴), as well as California-based Barefoot Networks.
]]>With mandates from China’s central government to push the digitization of public services in the country, Zhejiang province’s Hangzhou is at the forefront of this effort.
Yuan Jiayun, deputy secretary of the Communist Party in Zhejiang province, said that digitization is driving innovation in the city, but also in e-governance. Speaking at Alibaba’s The Computing Conference held in Hangzhou’s Yunqi Town today (September 19), he said that the local government would continue integrating the internet into public services.
The province is already highly digital. According to Yuan, 39% of Zhejiang’s GDP is generated by the digital economy, adding that it has worked its way up to becoming an innovation powerhouse.
Hangzhou’s City Brain has formed a large part of the city’s digitization. The system, which was previously limited to one district of the city, is now in use across the metropole. The system has over 110 autonomous alert capabilities and 1300 traffic signals that are controlled by AI, according to Jing Zhi, deputy chief of the Zhejiang Provincial Public Security Department. It can monitor both moving and stationary vehicles. Also, an interactive system that links the City Brain and residents has been built.
But China’s push towards digitization isn’t new. The country hopes to spearhead the use of emerging technologies in the public sector. In 2016, blockchain was included in its 13th Five-Year Plan. The goverment—both national and local—have made this a priority experimenting with projects that incorporate social insurance with blockchain, as well as attempting to harness the technology for digital identities.
Attempts are also being made to create digital IDs, travel documents, and health cards, while medical appointments can be made on Alipay and medical prescriptions are being put on the blockchain.
Also speaking at the event, president of Alibaba Group Simon Hu noted that while 20 years ago Hangzhou was known for commerce and its merchants, it is now represented by programmers. He said that digitization in the city is not only changing the lives of everyday citizens but small business owners as well.
Last year, the city introduced the world’s first internet court. Its main task is to handle the rising number of online disputes, including copyrights, purchases, defamation, contracts, and loans, but it also accepts filings electronically and tries cases via live stream
The country has also been bringing its judiciary online more broadly. In April, Alibaba inked a deal with Jiangsu Xinshiyun Technology to service up to 10,00 courts. The company is leveraging its AI technology to transcribe audio and video recordings, broadcast live proceedings, and analyze cases.
]]>U.S. senators seek punishment if China’s ZTE violates deal -Reuters
What happened: Bipartisan US lawmakers have introduced a bill that could reimpose sanctions on ZTE if it does not fully comply with the country’s laws and the agreement that it inked with the Trump administration. Since the ban was lifted, lawmakers have sought to clamp down on the telecommunications giant.
Why it’s important: Moves to block the company have so far failed due to opposition from the administration. However, Senate aides believe that the latest measure could get support from congressional leadership. ZTE suffered devastating losses as a result of the US imposing a ban on the company that prohibited it from sourcing American components. The action was taken as a result of ZTE violated US sanctions on Iran and North Korea. As a result, the company made a net loss of RMB 7.8 billion in the first half of 2018. However, it is expecting to see third-quarter profit—if no unexpected moves are made against it.
]]>Alibaba’s Taobao jumps on short video bandwagon, launches stand-alone app to drive e-commerce – SCMP
What happened: Taobao has launched a standalone short video app—called Lu Ke—allowing users to show off the goods they have bought on the platform. The app lets consumers post videos in various categories including travel, food, and beauty. It also includes a question and answer feature. Most importantly, product listings can be added to videos, allowing users to buy the merchandise once they have viewed it.
Why it’s important: In China, the lines are being blurred between social media and e-commerce platforms. Taobao is monopolizing on the popularity of short video apps and including social features that allow users themselves to promote sales. While the platform has been experimenting with video for some time in the form of live streaming and short videos, this is its first standalone video app.
]]>Bike rental, ride-hailing, and logistics services in China’s Guangdong province were suspended as Typhoon Mangkhut made landfall over the weekend, according to local media.
Chinese mobility services including those offered by ride-hailing giant Didi and Meituan-owned bike rental firm Mobike were temporarily stopped.
The typhoon, which is one of the region’s most powerful in decades, also caused the suspension of transportation services in Guangdong and Hong Kong, where train services were halted and flights were canceled.
Didi suspended numerous offerings—including taxi hailing, Express, and bike-rental, in seven cities including Zhuhai from 4 am to 5 pm yesterday. However, in Shenzhen, the company’s Premier service was exempt from interruptions. It’s designated driver service, which allows drunk drivers to be transported home in their own cars, will be suspended until the morning of September 18.
Mobike’s service suspension lasted from the early hours of September 16 until this morning (September 17).
Courier services were also affected by the typhoon. SF Express suspended services in Guangdong, Hainan, and Hong Kong in order to protect employees and goods. The company said it would resume operations as soon as it could.
Take out services were also interrupted. Alibaba-owned Ele.me said that users in Guangdong would not be able to make use of its delivery service. The company said the timeframe of its closure would be dependent on weather conditions.
Mangkhut is not traveling inland and is expected to hit Guizhou, Chongqing, and Yunnan later today. It remains to be seen whether similar suspensions will be imposed there. Over 2.5 million people were evacuated from southern China. Before battering Hong Kong and Guangdong, the typhoon made landfall in the Phillippines, killing at least 33. Mangkhut is expected to be downgraded to a tropical depression as it moves toward the interior of the country.
]]>Chinese multinational Lenovo has issued a statement saying that CEO Yang Yuanqing’s interview with UK-based technology website The Inquirer, in which he was quoted as saying that Lenovo is not a Chinese company, was misinterpreted.
“Lenovo is a global company,” Yang told The Inquirer. “We’re not a Chinese company,” he said, adding that the company has a global footprint. The article aimed to investigate how the company was able to stay out of the spotlight, despite other Chinese companies being censured abroad.
However, the company says its CEO’s words were misconstrued, and further confusion was created by adding to the quote to the headline of the article. It claims that he said the company is not only a Chinese company but also a global firm, as it has R&D and manufacturing bases in numerous countries around the world.
Yang took to Weibo to express his views, saying he didn’t expect his interview with a foreign media outlet to cause such a reaction. “My dream has always been for Lenovo to be not only a successful Chinese company but also a global company with inclusiveness,” he continued.
Chinese tech companies including ZTE and Huawei have a rough time in recent months. Regulators and lawmakers have moved to limit the companies’ businesses in the US and Australia, citing national security concerns. Additionally, ZTE was banned from sourcing components from American manufacturers after it was found to have violated US sanctions on Iran and North Korea. It eventually paid $1.4 billion in penalties and agreed to impose radical changes in upper management to have the ban lifted.
Additionally, both ZTE and Huawei have been banned from conducting 5G trials in India.
However, Lenovo has also seen its share of suspicion. In 2014, US security officials weighed in on its purchase of IBM’s x86 server business, saying that it could weaken national security. This wasn’t the first time officials had concerns about an IBM-Lenovo deal. In 2005, IBM sold its PC business to the Chinese tech giant, which raised concerns that the company’s laptops were “connecting to China.”
]]>Tencent has begun enforcing real-name verification for all players of its mobile multiplayer hit “Honour of Kings” (known as “Arena of Valor” outside of China) as part of a revamp of the gaming system.
The upgrade connects the game with China’s public security database to better enforce rules, including those limiting the amount of time minors can spend playing, according to Tencent.
The system will stop those who do not verify their identity in time from logging in. Children under 12 years old will be limited to playing one hour a day between 8 am and 9 pm. Minors over 12 will be restricted to two hours a day. Individuals awaiting approval will be subject to the same limits imposed on those under 12 years old.
Tencent has been focussing on the gaming habits of minors amid increased government scrutiny of video game publishers. Regulators previously criticized the company for its perceived contribution to video game addiction in minors. In June, Party mouthpiece People’s Daily blasted Tencent, referring to “Honour of Kings” as “poison” and said greater regulation of social games is needed.
As a result, Tencent has introduced a number of measures to curb excessive underage usage. In addition to time limits, the company added a feature that notifies account holders when a suspected minor’s in-game spending reaches RMB 500 a month, as well as greater parental controls.
Despite this, a broader crackdown on cultural content has seen the company’s gaming revenue plunge, while the sector witnessed its slowest first-half growth in ten years. The company’s second-quarter profits fell for the first time since 2005, in part, due to the removal of popular titles. The company was forced to remove blockbuster “Monster Hunter: World” from its WeGame platform—wiping out $15 billion from its market value— and shut down its popular poker game “Texas Hold’Em”.
In addition, it had to alter “PlayerUnknown Battleground“ (PUBG) last year before it was allowed to distribute it as it was deemed too violent.
China’s gaming industry as a whole has suffered as the Communist Party’s propaganda department has taken over licensing new online games. Approvals of new titles have slowed amid regulatory restructuring, with no new licenses being approved in the past six months.
]]>Over two million people around China have fallen prey to a scam in which they were offered free Huawei products, only to have to pay excessive fees for delivery and handling.
Users said they had seen an offer for Huawei’s wearable band on what they thought was the company’s website, and signed up, according to The Paper (in Chinese). Once the products were delivered, they were required to pay RMB 29 for logistics, storage, and labor, filling the fraudsters coffers. Upon opening the device, it became clear that the plastic product, which cost a few yuan to produce, was counterfeit.
The scammers, who were based in Harbin, made a total of RMB 80 million from the operation. According to a police investigation, they had run similar schemes since 2015 by offering free clothes, shoes, and watches to unsuspecting victims, who were then later forced to pay delivery fees. However, from June 2018 they moved on to Huawei bands. Since then the group expanded rapidly, employing hundreds to keep up with the demand, before being shut down.
This is not an isolated case—users of online services are facing increasing rates of fraudulent activity, according to a report released in February by Tencent. The company found that, with regards to telecom fraud, the total number of cases grew 89% between 2017 Q4 and 2018 Q1. While the average loss per case dropped, the highest losses from a single case exceeded a record-breaking RMB 10 million, with e-commerce accounting for the most significant share of the losses.
WeChat has also become a popular platform for scams. In August, Zhejiang’s Provincial Bureau of Industry and Commerce (ZBIC) censured Tencent after numerous incidents in which WeChat Pay users were defrauded by individuals pretending to their WeChat friends. The strong performance of mini programs has§ also attracted the attention of fraudsters.
Other tech giants have also found themselves in hot water for allegations of advertising and P2P lending fraud. Xiaomi was forced to pull ads after it was alleged that they were promoting fraudulent financial services, while Toutiao faces similar claims. Additionally, JD.com faced scrutiny after suspected large-scale fraud involving Feixun (斐讯), a brand sold on JD’s platform, was uncovered.
]]>Chinese content aggregator Qutoutiao (趣头条), or “Fun Headlines,” is expected to raise even less in its IPO than its recently adjusted total of $165 million, according to local media.
The company initially hoped to raise $300 million when listing on the Nasdaq. However, late last week it updated its filing to reflect a 45% decline in its expected IPO financing. Now, according to individuals familiar with the matter, that figure has dropped to $84 million, marking a 72% decrease compared to the amount proposed in August.
While the company has set its initial offer price per share at between $7 to $9, the figure is expected to sit at the lower end. Its IPO prospectus shows the company plans to offer 16 million American Depository Shares (ADS), while it is being underwritten by Citigroup, Deutsche Bank Securities, China Merchants Securities [HK], UBS Investment Bank, and KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Qutoutiao is the biggest rival of Jinri Toutiao. It has 62 million monthly active users (MAUs), and 21 million daily active users who spend more than 55 minutes on the platform every day, according to its prospectus.
Despite the competition, Qutoutiao and Jinri Toutiao have different target markets. While the latter focuses on higher-tier cities, the former has directed its attention to smaller cities. Qutoutiao was founded in 2016 when it drew users by awarding coins for using the app and inviting friends. These coins could be later exchanged to real RMB.
The company has seen rapid revenue growth since its founding. In the second-quarter of 2018, its revenue exceeded $108 million, 570% higher than the same period in 2017. The same is true of its 2017 revenue, which grew by 788% compared to 2016.
Qutoutiao has close ties to Tencent, which was a lead investor in its Series A in January 2017 and Series B in March. The financing valued the company at more than $1.6 billion, raising it to the status of a unicorn.
]]>Baidu-owned video streaming platform iQiyi is taking the massively popular short video format and targetting a previously untapped segment of the market: the elderly. The company launched Jinshi (锦视) this week (September 11), which hosts videos more appropriate to its target audience, according to New Business Intelligence.
Jinshi, the third short video offering from iQiyi, hopes to entice the older generation by focussing on topics including current events and politics, health, and the military. The app also differs from others in that users can switch between video and audio streams, and it features horizontal videos.
Video services in China have seen a marked uptick in usage, which is primarily being driven by short-form videos. In 2013, the country spent 60% of its daily entertainment time on social media and 13% on video platforms. As of March 2018, video services have seen a dramatic increase in time spent on their platforms, up nearly 70%. Users of popular short video platforms Douyin and Kuaishou spend an average of 52 minutes a day using these services, according to Mary Meeker’s 2018 Internet Trends Report.
As such, China’s “silver economy” is gaining more and more attention. With increasing levels of technology literacy, individuals over 50 are making use of these tools not only for entertainment but also keeping in contact—unsurprisingly, given the app’s widespread use, Chinese over-50s are most comfortable using WeChat, according to a study by Tencent and the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS).
However, they are also using their smartphones to consume content. According to the same study, 67% of respondents read about current affairs and 66.9% about health. Additionally, of the 21,000 people aged 50 to 80 registered on Ximalaya FM, 32.3% listen to audio books.
This consumption of online content is obviously what iQiyi hopes to take advantage of. However, this year has been a difficult one for short video platforms with the increasing intensity of crackdowns on “inappropriate” content by regulators.
]]>Blockchain data accepted as evidence in legal complaint filed by short video app Douyin – SCMP
What happened: In a first for the country’s entertainment industry, short video platform Douyin has filed a copyright infringement lawsuit against Baidu’s Huopai Video, with evidence being stored on the blockchain. Douyin is seeking RMB 1 million for unauthorized operation and downloads of a video in May.
Why it’s important: China’s supreme court recently ruled that verified digital information, such as digital signatures, timestamps, and records held on the blockchain, could be accepted as evidence. These sorts of evidence are now admissible in the country’s internet courts, the first of which was set up in Hangzhou last year. Lawsuits like this, particularly between big tech companies, will further highlight the use cases of new technologies in judicial matters. Additionally, experts believe that the use of blockchain evidence in China’s courts could also lead to a surge in the number of startups providing blockchain storage solutions.
]]>Ofo Denies Reports It Can’t Keep Up With Salary Payments – Yicai Global
What happened: Bike rental firm ofo has denied claims that it was not able to pay all of its staff salaries last month. The company rebutted rumors by saying that it had paid all employees as required and that it holds the right to counter libelous claims. Reports circulated yesterday (September 11) that the company is battling a mountain of debt, and, as a result, had not made payments to employees.
Why it’s important: The latest rumor comes after claims that the company has taken out a loan from Alibaba to the tune of RMB 60 million. Whether this is true or not is not known, as conflicting reports proliferate. However, ofo has been facing financial difficulties for most of the year. The company has retreated from international markets, saying that it is focussing on areas that are of a high priority. In order to increase its revenue ofo began selling advertising on its bikes. However, this effort was thwarted by local governments in some areas. Most recently, it began selling advertising in the form of five-second videos in its app.
]]>China accepts blockchain verification for evidence in courtroom – SCMP
What happened: China’s supreme court has released rules for newly-formed internet-related courts, ordering them to recognize digital data as evidence if they have been verified by methods including blockchains. The court stated that evidence that has been verified by other methods including digital signatures and timestamps should also be accepted.
Why it’s important: China has been moving to set up courts that deal specifically with internet-related issues as well as pushing the adoption of blockchain in government services. In 2017, the country set up the first court of this kind in Hangzhou, which has so far handled over 10,000 cases including cases of defamation, lending, and domain issues. In addition, China has been promoting the development of blockchain, with the technology being mentioned in the country’s latest five-year plan. Local governments have been implementing its use for securing documents including tax invoices, which have often been created fraudulently for numerous reasons, including tax deductions and remuneration from employers.
]]>China’s gaming boom hit by freeze in licensing as propaganda body takes charge – SCMP
What happened: The Chinese Communist Party’s propaganda department is being given the power to license online games as it seeks greater control of cultural content. Approvals of new games have been suspended since March, with delays expected for the next six months.
Why it’s important: China’s gaming industry is the biggest in the world, but the past six months have been trying for game developers. Changing regulations have resulted in the slowest first-half growth in the sector in a decade. Tencent has even attributed its disappointing first-half results to the regulatory reshuffle. The company pulled hit title Monster Hunter: World from its WeGame platform days after it was released due to complaints about violence and tightening regulation. However, the government sees the initiative as a way to battle myopia and regulate what it sees as harmful content.
]]>Tencent-backed Chinese content aggregator Qutoutiao (趣头条), or “Fun Headlines,”, which recently filed for an IPO in the US, has lowered the amount it expects to raise from $300 million to $165 million.
The company initially submitted its IPO filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commision on August 17. However, it filed an amendment on September 4 in which it reduced its maximum offering price by close to 50%.
In the updated document, the company said it expects the initial offering price to be between $7 and $9. The company said the proceeds would be used in a variety of areas, including expanding and enhancing content offerings.
According to the filing, Qutoutiao has 62 million monthly active users (MAUs), 21 million daily active users who spend more than 55 minutes on the platform every day.
The company is the biggest rival of Jinri Toutiao, China’s top aggregation app. It also has close ties to Tencent, which was a lead investor in its Series A in January 2017 and Series B in March. The financing valued the company at more than $1.6 billion, raising it to the status of a unicorn.
Tencent’s involvement in Qutoutiao makes sense—the tech giant has been at odds with Jinri Toutiao’s parent company Bytedance for some time. The two companies have been in and out of court for a range of issues, including unfair competition. There is also somewhat of a feud between the company’s CEOs, who have taken to arguing on WeChat Moments, a feature similar to that of Facebook’s newsfeed.
Despite the competition, Qutoutiao and Jinri Toutiao have different target markets. While the latter focuses on higher-tier cities, the former has directed its attention to smaller cities. Qutoutiao was founded in 2016 when it drew users by awarding coins for using the app and inviting friends. These coins could be later exchanged to real RMB
]]>Chinese smartphone manufacturer Vivo has announced its internet of things (IoT) strategy with the launch of its first connected platform: Jovi IoT.
At the announcement event in Beijing on September 6, the company detailed that it hoped to take on the smart home market, allowing users to control the devices in their homes using their smartphones through integration with its voice assistant, according to the local media.
In July, Vivo—along with appliance manufacturer Midea, smartphone manufactuer OPPO, and others—formed the IoT Open Ecology Alliance to ensure interoperability between devices, ease of use for consumers, and streamlining of development for manufacturers.
Smart home devices have an increasing number of applications in homes, including energy management, entertainments, security, and lighting. Alibaba, Xiaomi, Baidu, JD.com, Haier, and Hisense have already entered the market, providing a range of products from smart speakers to connected TVs and security systems.
As a result, the smart home market is growing rapidly. Currently, just 4.9% of Chinese homes make use of IoT devices. However, penetration is expected to reach 22.9% by 2022. This increase is set to drive sector-wide revenue from $7.1 million in 2018 to $26 million in 2022.
However, the growth of the market also brings risks. Some Chinese IoT devices, particularly those that provide connected video cameras have bad track records. In 2017, Xiongmai Technology, an IoT camera manufacturer based in Hangzhou, admitted that its cameras had been affected by the notorious Mirai malware. In the same year, cybersecurity firm Bitdefender found that over 175,000 cameras made by Shenzhen’s Neo Electronics could be remotely exploited.
How Chinese manufacturers’ interception of foreign IoT tech is a threat to our privacy
According to a report by the Chinese Cybersecurity Emergency Response Team (CN-CERT), the number of IoT exploits found by the organization increased by 120% in 2017, with 27,000 devices being targeted by malicious actors every day.
Additionally, security concerns have been raised about Vivo’s products in the past. After users of Vivi’s NEX, the company’s flagship smartphone, reported that the phone’s camera took unwanted photos, it was alleged that Baidu’s voice input app (百度输入法) on the phone was active and recording when the voice input app is not engaged.
]]>Despite government instructions to remove misleading listings, online housing rental platforms including 58.com (58同城), Anjuke (安居客), and Fang.com (房天下) have failed to abide by the order.
An investigation by the Beijing News found that after the Beijing Municipal Housing and Urban-Rural Development Committee, among others, issued a deadline of September 1 to clean up these listings, the companies still had not complied with the directive.
Rental agencies have been found to include fake pictures of apartments in their listings on these platforms to attract more customers. In some instances, what appears to be newly renovated apartments turn out to be old and run down. Location data is also faked, with agencies advertising properties as being close to public transport when long walks are required.
Once prospective renters have been attracted by low prices and striking apartments, agents take them to view numerous properties within in the same price range, often with none of them matching the pictures in the listing.
Despite the government order, the websites still contain fake information and allow unconfirmed personal accounts to post listings. The report claims that rental agencies including 5i5j.com (我爱我家) and Danke (蛋壳公寓) are among those responsible.
58.com and Anjuke responded by saying that they had repeatedly notified rental agencies and individuals that make use of the website about the cleanup. They also claimed that the process was ongoing. The companies said they would make use of varying degrees of punishments, which include deleting the listing, deleting the user, and blocking guilty parties.
This is not the first time this year the housing rental industry has found its in hot water. The widow of an Alibaba employee filed a lawsuit against apartment leasing giant Ziroom (自如) after her husband died of leukemia in July. She alleged that high formaldehyde levels in the apartment had caused his death. The company has also been accused of ramping up apartment rental prices in Beijing.
]]>Chinese streaming giant Tencent Music will reportedly file for its US-based IPO today (September 7). The company hopes to raise $2 billion at a valuation of up to $31 billion, according to IPO Zaozhidao (IPO早知道), a WeChat account with a good track record.
In July, parent company Tencent announced plans to spin off its music business, saying it will be listed “on a recognized stock exchange in the United States.” The date of the IPO is rumored to be October 18, and is being underwritten by Goldman Sacks and Morgan Stanley.
Tencent Music runs QQ Music, Kugou, and Kuwo. According to figures from December 2017, Tencent Music has 700 million monthly active users (MAU), 17 million songs, and 120 million paying subscribers.
The company’s rumored valuation has increased steadily with time. In 2017, it was expected to be valued at $10 billion, rising to its current expected valuation of over $30 billion. Additionally, Tencent Music was listed on Hurun’s Greater China Unicorn Index for the first time this year.
The company has seen rapidly rising profits over the past three years, driven by paid subscriptions, licensing, and advertising. Its 2016 revenue reached nearly RMB 5 billion, with a net profit of close to RMB 600 million. A year later, its operating income reached RMB 9.4 billion and its net profit exceeded RMB 1.88 billion. These gains are predicted to continue in the future, with an expected revenue of RMB 17 billion in 2018.
Tencent Music’s three streaming apps together control a significant share of the market. The company faces competition from Alibaba, NetEase, and Baidu Music, the latter merging with Taihe Music in 2015 and rebranding to Qianqian Music in 2018.
Despite this competition, some of the major players in the industry formed copyright partnerships as the government tightened its grip on services providing unlicensed music. In 2017, Tencent Music teamed with Ali Music Group on music copyrights. This was followed by a cross-licensing agreement with NetEase Music following copyright disputes. The company has also formed a partnership with international counterpart Spotify.
]]>What happened: US senators questioned tech giants Facebook and Twitter about their partnerships with Chinese companies, which they say could pose threats to American security. Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg and Twitter Chief Executive Jack Dorsey were brought before the Senate Intelligence Committee to discuss the companies’ responses to the foreign use of social media to influence US politics. In the discussion, specific mention was made of ZTE and Huawei.
Why it’s important: The news follows broader concerns about the operations of Chinese firms like Huawei and ZTE within the US, but also how American companies are sharing data with their Chinese counterparts. In June, Facebook said that its partnerships with Chinese telecoms had allowed some of the country’s companies to access the private data of Facebook users. US lawmakers are increasingly worried about the relationship between Chinese firms and the country’s government, citing national security concerns.
]]>What happened: Police records show that CEO of Chinese e-commerce platform JD Richard Liu was arrested for alleged first-degree rape in the US. Liu was in the country as part of a residency for US-China business administration doctorate program at the University of Minnesota. No charges have been filed against the billionaire businessman, but Minneapolis police have said the investigation is ongoing.
Why it’s important: Under Minnesota law, Liu could face up to 30 years for the alleged crime. JD shares have also been affected, with investors becoming wary of the investigation’s impact. As a result, the company’s stock price plunged to a 19-month low in US trading on Tuesday (Septemeber 4). The investigation adds to JD’s woes which include second-quarter profit numbers which are eight times lower than analysts expected. Additionally, the company has been facing increased competition in the e-commerce sector as a result of the rapid rise of newcomers like Pinduoduo.
]]>What happened: Chinese video streaming platform iQiyi is suing Jinri Toutiao operator Bytedance for RMB30 million ($4.4 million) over illegal streaming of its popular show The Story of Yanxi Palace. iQiyi has accused the company of hosting short clips of the show, causing damage to the video streaming giant. The Haidian District People’s Court of Beijing has accepted the case. However, representatives at Bytedance say they have not yet received notice of the case.
Why it’s important: Bytedance has spent a lot of time in court this year. The company found itself at odds with both Tencent and Baidu for unfair competition and copyright infringements. These cases have sought compensation ranging from RMB 1 to RMB 90,000. Matters have even got personal, with CEOs weighing in on their respective WeChat Moments. This is not the first time iQiyi has filed a lawsuit against another company either. In May, the company sued Bilibili for alleged illegal streaming of Rap of China.
]]>Large utility companies have long held a monopoly on electricity production. Since the late 1800s both state-owned and privately-held enterprises have taken advantage of economies of scale to profit from the creation and distribution of power.
The situation in China is no different. A push for energy reform beginning in the 1980s eventually resulted in the dissolution of the State Power Corporation of China, but the country’s electric grids are still overseen by just two companies: the State Grid Corporation of China and China Southern Power Grid. These firms hold geographical monopolies—one in the north and one in the south—on the transmission of energy, which is largely generated by five state-owned enterprises.
The justifications for centralization are numerous: efficiency, innovation in transmitting electricity over long distances, regulation, and more. But the paradigm is shifting.
The development of increasingly efficient—and affordable —alternative energy sources is prompting the evolution of a system that isn’t characterized by the monopoly of centralized production. Instead, individuals themselves generate and sell electricity, mimicking the distributed nature of the technology that underpins it—blockchain.
“The bigger picture is that we establish decentralized autonomous energy communities,” Lathika Chandra Mouli, business development manager at Shanghai-based Energo Labs, told TechNode. “You have energy trading, and you have locally produced energy being consumed first, and then the grid is used as a backup.”
The system is more straightforward than it sounds. Prosumers—those who create and use electricity—are connected to consumers on a local utility grid (microgrid). Depending on a range of factors, including geography, these local grids can function independently of or in conjunction with the main power grid. The solar-equipped prosumers then sell excess electricity they have created to consumers.
The result is that energy is sold as a digital asset. Energo Labs built a distributed app (dApp) on the Qtum Blockchain to facilitate this, with plans to move to its own public chain later this year. The app allows users to check their local energy market, negotiate prices, and set automatic buy and sell thresholds. It is currently being used in a proof of concept pilot project at De La Salle University in Manila, Philippines.
While peer-to-peer energy exchange is relatively novel, the idea of decentralizing energy production is not. Traditionally, large-scale power plants are set up close to power-generating resources. Electricity is then transmitted over long distances to reach centers that distribute it to consumers.
But transmission costs can be enormous, primarily due to energy loss over long distances. In China, average losses account for around 5.5% of all energy produced, resulting in substantial carbon emissions and higher electricity prices.
“Large-scale wind farms and solar parks helped the development of these industries in their early stages,” Shen Wei, a research fellow at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), told TechNode. “But it has become obvious that there are side effects for such modes of development.”
This is especially true of the energy producers in China’s north-eastern regions—Gansu and Xinjiang—where local energy usage is low, and electricity needs to be transmitted to the east coast where the demand is much higher.
Decentralized production aims to address these transmission issues by placing energy sources closer to consumers. Proximity minimizes energy losses and infrastructure expenditure, thereby curtailing costs. Government subsidies are driving this general trend in eastern China while removing or decreasing them for large-scale production systems.
“Companies are looking at distributed systems for wind and solar in particular,” said Shen. “There are a lot of debates about this: technologically, politically, and economically. I think this trend is inevitable; it’s just how the companies will realize that and adapt to it.”
However, these systems are generally only geographically decentralized. They still render individuals powerless when it comes to energy generation, while large utilities control the production system. Energo Labs and other companies are trying to change this by making consumers active participants in the creation process.
To do this, every household on a microgrid requires links to other homes and a smart meter. The device measures how much electricity is produced, consumed, and transacted. Additionally, prosumers need solar panels and energy storage systems, allowing them to store and sell excess energy they produce.
It’s not just houses that could be affected by energy trading. In high-density areas where residential apartments dominate, access to solar panels and storage could be shared, with savings being distributed among residents.
But there are obvious limitations. “Energy storage will change how energy trading happens and how renewable energy is produced and consumed,” said Mouli. She says access to energy storage is what the company is betting on.
Conveniently, this is also a focus of the Chinese government. In 2017, the country’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) released a document calling for government institutions, energy utilities, and private companies to develop, support, and utilize emerging energy storage technologies.
China’s government is harnessing its data to make blockchain-based identity a reality
Regardless of storage systems’ decreasing prices, they remain one of the most significant barriers to adoption. This is especially true in urban areas, where energy consumption is extremely high, requiring not only large numbers of photovoltaic panels but also very efficient storage systems. Mouli says that finding financing for storage systems as well as for maintenance of all the equipment is one of the biggest struggles the company is facing.
Despite high entry costs, peer-to-peer energy systems aim to incentivize investment in renewable technologies. Allowing individuals to sell their excess electricity, and more importantly, negotiate the price they want for the electricity, holds significant value.
Systems already exist where homeowners who generate more energy than they need can feed it into the main grid. However, producers don’t get to choose how much their electricity is worth—the energy utilities do.
“But here, you can basically sell your energy to a neighbor, and you can ask them for a particular price, or you can have different pricing mechanisms that have more economic incentives,” said Mouli.
Additionally, the system allows for homeowners to live a more carbon-neutral lifestyle and consciously choose a more sustainable option, she says. But the social impact is higher in rural communities, where there is limited access to the grid. A school with solar panels could function as a prosumer by distributing excess stored energy to surrounding houses at night, increasing security and quality of life for the entire community.
While blockchain provides a system for trading energy as a digital asset, it also creates a valuable resource: data.
A network of distributed hardware would be difficult to run with an effective management mechanism. Blockchain in this context allows for the safe storage of usage data, reduces operation costs by eliminating middlemen, and helps garner insights on generation, consumption, and transactions.
Analysis of usage data can then be used to predict problems such as outages in a large scale microgrid. But, most importantly Mouli says, the data will help energy trading gain wider acceptance.
“One of the most important applications we are focusing on is policy, she said. “So using the data to change policies on energy trading, and being able to approach utilities and governments to show the benefits of energy trading in different contexts, including financially and environmentally.”
Changes in Chinese energy policy are in part focus on addressing the power imbalance between the two grid operators and numerous electrical utilities. The government is seeking to deregulate the sector by revoking the grid companies’ ability to sell electricity, instead allowing private companies to enter the energy selling market.
But addressing cryptocurrency regulation is a more pressing issue for the nascent energy trading market. The Chinese government has led an intensifying crackdown on cryptocurrencies over the past year. In September 2017, regulators began moving to ban initial coin offerings (ICOs), exchanges, cryptocurrency events, and online forums that discuss virtual currencies. As a result, any form of token-based trading system in China will be affected.
Mouli says that Energo Labs’ focus is Southeast Asia and Taiwan, but they are speaking to various stakeholders in China. “Peer-to-peer still has a long way to go in terms of regulations in China,” she said, adding that the company eventually does want to provide access to their energy trading platform in China.
But it’s not just cryptocurrency regulations that pose challenges to peer-to-peer energy trading networks. Utilities and grid operators may be unwilling to forego control over the market.
“The grid companies are very powerful as a political interest group,” said Shen. They are so powerful, in fact, that they were able to limit reforms in the 80s to demonopolize the energy sector. Shen refers to the combination of energy industry players and the government as a “policy community.”
If industry players see a system like this as a threat, they have the power to influence policymaking and create regulations that make its functioning impossible.
“How [do we] persuade the grid to accept this strategy?” said Shen, referring to general decentralization of the energy sector. “The grid is so powerful, and my recent analysis is that every time they can successfully bend the policy orientations according to their own interests.”
But Mouli doesn’t see the energy trading as an opposition movement to traditional utility companies. In the new paradigm, she believes, their role will shift from generators and distributors of energy to that of an overseer of a new system. “They will still be responsible for maintaining all of the energy transactions, production, consumption, and ensuring that there is energy equality across the country,” she says.
Nonetheless, effective implementation in China is a long way off. In the meantime, energy utilities and private companies will lead the charge in the country’s push for renewable energy parity.
]]>Esports: Move to less violent games for 2022 Asiad – Alisport CEO – Reuters
What happened: Zhang Dazhong, CEO of Alibaba’s sports arm Alisport, said e-sports will shift away from violent games to sport-focussed titles for the 2022 Asian Games. Zhang’s comments come after the 2018 event, which served as a trial for the e-sports community. He said also the discipline would need to change to ensure inclusion in the Olympics.
Why it’s important: In April, International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach said violent video games go against Olympic values. As a result, the inclusion of titles like League of Legends will be unlikely to make the cut. Zhang also made reference to Beijing’s recent crackdown on mobile gaming, saying a move to sport orientated games was taking place globally. The Chinese government plans to limit the number of titles released every year. Zhang said the government is “concerned” about violent content, but is supportive of e-sports.
]]>The death of a 20-year-old woman who was raped and murdered while using ride-hailing firm Didi’s carpooling service last week has triggered renewed outrage. The company suspended its Hitch service on Monday following the death of a second female passenger within the past four months, saying it would only resume operation after all safety issues were addressed.
On August 24, the passenger surnamed Zhao was on her way to a birthday party in southern Zhejiang province. During the trip, her Didi driver navigated to a secluded mountainous area, coerced her into transferring around RMB 9,000 to him, and then forced himself on her before taking her life.
While safety issues are a sector-wide problem, the murders have drawn the ire of government officials and the public alike for creating an environment in which harassment and killing are possible. Most notably, the company’s customer service staff have faced scrutiny for their poor handling of this case and others.
After realizing something was amiss, Zhao contacted her friends, pleading for help. They, in turn, notified Didi’s customer service team, repeatedly asking for information about the driver. Their requests were met with assurances that the case had been flagged, but nothing more. After the police got involved, they too were made to wait. It took them over two hours to get information about the driver.
A day before Zhao’s death, another passenger, surnamed Lin, allegedly almost suffered a similar fate at the hand of the same driver. However, she grew suspicious and got out of the car, eventually threatening to call the police. Lin took a photo of the car and submitted a complaint to Didi’s customer service department. Staff promised to get back to her but never did.
The failures of the customer service team have garnered increasing amounts of attention. But it is also Didi’s lack of contingency plans if one party cancels a trip that is worrying.
In both cases, the trip was canceled shortly before or after it started, a common practice that allows drivers to pick up more passengers en route. In Zhao’s case, police reported that she had, for unknown reasons, canceled the journey in the app one hour after the trip began. Didi initially claimed she was never in the car and refused to give any further information. Similarly, Lin canceled her journey at the driver’s request after he said he would be late. Lin agreed because she thought this was common practice among Hitch drivers.
The company launched safety functions like Emergency Help Button with real-time sound recording feature and Itinerary Sharing in July 2016, and the Emergency Help functions were updated in June 2018. However, these features are not available unless a trip is active.
Apart from technical and other shortcomings, the problems are also institutional. The platform has repeatedly been criticized for breeding a culture of sexual harassment. Hitch, which was previously likened to a social network, allowed drivers to view the age, gender, and occupation of the passenger. More worryingly, it also permitted reviews of the passengers which often made lewd references to female passengers’ looks and body types, which had been taken down after the murder of the flight attendant. The objectification also extended to its advertising campaigns, in which the company made use of innuendo to attract drivers at the expense of female passengers.
But general macroeconomic factors also need to be considered. China’s slowdown is also affecting jobs and increasing the difficulty of finding employment with adequate income. This is especially true among the younger generation. Despite a record number of graduates leaving university, China’s economic growth fell to 6.7% in 2017, with unemployment in this bracket reaching as high as 30%.
When an air hostess who was also using the company’s Hitch service was murdered in May, Didi’s facial recognition system failed to alert the company that the driver was unauthorized to use the platform. Didi’s vetting practice for drivers is again being called into question. The company claims it collects vehicle and identity information from drivers, and information relating to criminal records every three months from the police. It says those with severe violations of “public safety, public security or traffic safety, or a history of mental illness,” will not be allowed to use the platform.
For Didi, the murders mark a severe breach of trust, exemplified by the increased downloads of apps that facilitate video calls to police. Following the latest apology by the company, in which it promised to devote more time and resources to customer services and develop better contingency plans, internet users questioned whether it was another perfunctory public relations stunt.
Users also began documenting their departure from using the platform on social media, prompting the use of the hashtag #BoycottDidi. As a result, the company’s app fell from 9th to 61st place in the Chinese Apple App Store. It is unclear whether the incidents will cause the company to delay its $80 billion IPO, which is rumored to take place this year.
But Didi is not just going to have to answer to its customers. China’s National Development and Reform Commission has announced plans to extend the country’s nascent social credit system to the transport industry following the latest murder. This is bound to have far-reaching effects on companies in the sector, which could face extensive cross-departmental punishments for infractions. Officials have called for greater general oversight of the ride-hailing sector, which has had a turbulent few years, with accusations of sexual harassment as well as price wars between major players.
The Ministry of Transport has also weighed in with a list of demands. “These two vicious incidents that have violated the life and safety of passengers has exposed the gaping operational loopholes of the Didi Chuxing platform,” it said in a statement and ordered the company to improve its driver vetting process, among other demands.
The murders are affecting the industry as a whole. Most notably, mapping company AutoNavi suspended its carpooling service shortly after news of the killing went public. Didi rival Dida also made changes to its service after the last Didi passenger was murdered in May by removing a social networking component from its app.
There is likely to be pushback from local governments around the country. Didi has already been summoned by authorities in ten cities around the country, which require them to address its security loopholes, integrate vehicle and driver data into a government-supervised system, and implement an “emergency SOS” button its app.
However, it is clear that local governments expect compliance by the industry as a whole, and they are seeking greater supervision of ride-hailing platforms. Didi is not the only company that has been summoned after the latest murder. Up to eight other firms are being caught in the net of government supervision.
With additional reporting from Chris Udemans
]]>China’s ZTE sees third-quarter profit after first-half loss on U.S. supplier ban – Reuters
What happened: Chinese telecommunications giant ZTE expects to make a profit in the third-quarter of 2018 after the worst performance in its history during the first six months of the year, in which it reported a net loss of RMB 7.8 billion. The company said it expects to post a net profit of between RMB 24.2 million ($3.54 million) and RMB 1 billion ($146.40 million) in the quarter ending September 30.
Why it’s important: In April, ZTE was banned from sourcing American-made components after it violated US sanctions on Iran and North Korea. The ban was lifted after the company paid $1.4 billion in penalties and agreed to impose radical changes in upper management. Both ZTE and Huawei have faced challenges to their overseas businesses, with the US and Australia moving to limit the use of the companies’ infrastructure within their borders. These moves, along with the punitive measures imposed on ZTE, have chilled relations between China and the US.
]]>China’s ban on cryptocurrency promotional events now extends beyond the capital to Guangzhou – SCMP
What happened: Guangzhou’s Development District has banned events promoting cryptocurrencies to continue “maintaining the security and stability of the financial system.” This is the first ban of its kind outside the country’s capital, where similar events are prohibited following a crackdown in the city’s Chaoyang District earlier this month.
Why it’s important: The move is the latest in a widening clampdown on cryptocurrencies that began in September last year with the ban on ICOs and exchanges. The government recently reiterated that fundraising through cryptocurrencies lures investors through the idea of “financial innovation, but are just Ponzi schemes.” China’s big tech companies are rushing to remain compliant after regulators have begun shutting down online media relating to crypto. Baidu recently shuttered a slew of related online forums and Tencent and Alibaba are restricting virtual currency transactions made through Alipay and WeChat Pay.
]]>
Chinese electric vehicle Weltmeister Motor (WM Motor, 威马汽车) had one of its EX5 test vehicles spontaneously combust at its research institute in Chengdu, according to local media.
The news comes at a bad time for the Chinese electric vehicle maker—the explosion occurred on August 25, just one month before a mass delivery of the cars to customers.
The vehicle, which was an early test model that had recently been subjected to multiple rounds of destructive testing, allegedly ignited during dismantling procedures. The company said that the process was not completed after circuit protection devices were removed, causing a short circuit.
A company insider claims that employees at the research institute violated regulations by charging the test vehicle during the end-of-life process causing it to catch fire. According to the individual, the people responsible have been punished.
Customers are questioning the official and unofficial statements, resulting in the cancellation of orders. Concerns were raised over whether the battery played a role in the fire. The company has denied these allegations.
Weltmeister is one of many companies that have been described as China’s answer to Tesla. Competition within the premium EV space has been heating up, with players like NIO, Xpeng, and Byton securing funding and pursuing IPOs.
Weltmeister has received a total of $1.2 billion in funding, with its latest round being completed in December 2017. The company is backed by both Tencent and Baidu, giving it access to the content and connectivity of both companies.
The market for electric vehicles in China has grown enormously over the past few years. In 2017, over 770,000 units were sold, up 53% compared to 2016. This number is expected to reach one million during 2018 compared to 400,000 in the US. Both the private and public sectors are investing in electric vehicles. As of July, the total of number charging piles for new energy vehicles in China exceeded 660,00 with 275,000 of them built by the government.
]]>WeChat’s fast-rising rival Bullet Messenger (子弹短信) has received RMB 150 million ($22 million) in funding after its first week of operation, according to the company’s founder.
The announcement was made by Smartisan CEO Luo Yonghao on Weibo yesterday (August 28) after the platform had risen to become the most downloaded social iOS app in the Chinese App Store. The app—made by Smartisan-backed startup Kuairu (快如)—beat both its rival WeChat and the widely popular live streaming app Douyin (Tik Tok).
However, the app’s rise might not continue to be as fast as a bullet. Some have already pointed out that it contains content that would not be permitted on WeChat, particularly as the government is cracking down on “vulgar” content.
Was really puzzled as to why new messaging app #BulletMessage #子弹短信 suddenly got hot in China this last week. After playing around for a few hours, 1st impression is it’s full of porn & other stuff that’s blocked/too sensitive for WeChat. Making more sense now 🤓 pic.twitter.com/irXUerK0z4
— Matthew Brennan (@mbrennanchina) August 28, 2018
The app has also been criticized for it its lack of security. Some have noted that it does not offer basic protection for users, including two-factor authentification, end-to-end encryption, and other privacy settings.
“End-to-end encryption should be the basis of messaging apps nowadays,” Wang Boyuan, editor of TechCrunch China, told TechNode. “It should be a better, safer [app] if we need a replacement for WeChat.”
Similar views were expressed on Weibo, with one user saying that if the company does not deal with the proliferation of illicit content and address privacy and security issues, its popularity would wane as quickly as it rose.
Luo previously stated that the idea of users deleting WeChat in favor of Bullet Messenger is unrealistic. However, Smartisan is taking a different route by focusing on chatting versus function-heavy WeChat. The app puts much emphasis on its voice-to-text option, a function that WeChat has had for a while but which many users found inconvenient to use.
The app has shown interest in offering payments services to make it more competitive. Earlier this week Luo also said the company was looking to integrate Alipay’s functionality, the biggest competitor to WeChat Pay.
It also has a news feed integrated with headlines from Jinri Toutiao and Tencent but does not allow users to post like in WeChat Moments, a function similar to Facebook’s feed.
China’s internet population is enormous. The country has nearly 800 million internet users and 753 million individuals using the internet on mobile devices, according to the 2018 China Internet Report. Chinese tech companies are vying to gain a share of the market. However, a small player like Bullet Messenger is unlikely to make a dent in WeChat’s share.
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Chinese smartphone manufacturer and telecommunications giant Huawei has launched a pilot program for an electronic ID (eID) that integrates into Huawei Pay.
The eID is issued by the Ministry of Public Security and stored on the security chip within Huawei phones, protecting the integrity of the sensitive identity data. According to local media, it will allow users to authenticate their identity online, but will also be available for offline use when checking into hotels.
Sun Jianfa, director of Huawei Pay’s Consumer Businesses Group, said the ultimate goal is to allow users not to use wallets. He said the company hopes to integrate ID cards, bank cards, various membership cards, door keys, and even car keys into Huawei Pay.
The digitization of government-issued ID cards in a popular trend in China, with officials hoping not only to increase convenience but also improve the integrity of personal data. In April 2018, Jiangxi Province issued the first batch of ID chips for smartphone users. The smart chips, dubbed SIMeID, attach to the phone’s SIM card and can store sensitive identifying information for safer verification over the internet.
Huawei is not the first Chinese tech company to experiment with ID services. Both Tencent and Alibaba have also trialed digitized versions of China’s ubiquitous ID cards. Alibaba is currently trialing its Alipay-based digital IDs in Hangzhou and Quzhou in Zhejiang province, and Fuzhou in Fujian province. While the virtual IDs allow their users to book train tickets and check into hotels, they are only accepted by local authorities.
Tencent also began issuing ID cards though WeChat in December 2017. The service was first provided in the southern city of Guangzhou.
Numerous other government services have also undergone the process of digitization. Tencent has also been working with the government to provide a WeChat-based e-pass that would make travel between Hong Kong and mainland China easier for Chinese citizens.
In May, Beijing began issuing electronic health cards through WeChat for use at some of the city’s hospitals. The move forms part of a broader push to improve healthcare and standardize patient information.
]]>Chinese downloads of police apps surge after latest Didi ride-hitching death – SCMP
What happened: Downloads of mobile apps which allow users to contact police in a video call have surged following the alleged murder and rape of a 20-year-old female Didi passenger last week. Gong’an 110, or Police 110 translated into English, was one of the most downloaded free iOS apps on Monday (August 27), despite the app being plagued by complaints of bugs and registration errors.
Why it’s important: The increased usage of these apps draw attention to the insecurity that is appearing in the wake of public outrage over the weekend. The rush has also come amid calls by authorities for greater oversight of the ride-hailing sector. The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has already weighed in on the issue, saying that it will coordinate the regulation and expand the use of the social credit system across the transport industry.
]]>What happened: Following the second murder of a female passenger in three months, Didi said it would suspend its carpooling service today. The company also said it had failed to investigate a complaint by another passenger that related to the driver that was allegedly responsible for the rape and murder in Wenzhou, Zhejiang province on Friday (August 24).
Why it’s important: The incident has caused public outrage. Posts on social media relating to the case have been reposted or read nearly one billion times. Didi’s inability to respond to customer complaints has also been called to attention. Prior to the murder, another female passenger reported the driver for harassing her. She claimed the driver attempted to drive her to a secluded area before she was able to get out of the car. Didi has responded to the second murder by firing Huang Jieli, general manager of its carpooling business, and Huang Jinhong, deputy president of the company’s services department. Despite the company revamping its service and including mandatory facial recognition for all drivers, many users have chosen to delete the app and cease using the company’s services.
]]>China says Australia has made ‘wrong decision’ after Huawei ban – Reuters
What happened: China’s commerce ministry has said that the Australian government has made the “wrong decision” when banning Huawei from supplying equipment for its 5G network. Shortly after the ban was announced, the ministry warned that the move will have a “negative impact” on the commercial impact on both Chinese and Australian companies.
Why it’s important: The ban follows the advice given by Australian security agencies, which said the use of the Huawei 5G infrastructure increases the risk of foreign interference and hacking. The relationship between the two countries has already soured as a result of allegations that China has been meddling in Australian politics. In addition, the move is part of a broader push in Australia, the US, and the UK to combat security risks the company’s equipment poses due to alleged ties to the Chinese government.
]]>Two lawsuits against social e-commerce firm Pinduoduo alleging that the company misled investors have been accepted by US courts in California and New York.
The cases were filed as a result of investors losing money due information they claim was misrepresented or concealed in Pinduoduo’s listing documents, according to local media.
Shortly after Pinduoduo’s Nasdaq listing, Chinese regulators launched an investigation into the company for selling counterfeit goods. The announcement caused the company’s share price to plummet, resulting in losses for investors.
This marks the third suit against the company that has been filed in the US. In July, a case was accepted by a New York court before Pinduoduo’s listing. Chinese firm Daddy’s Choice planned to sue the company for knowingly selling products that violated its trademarks. The company said it had informed the e-commerce giant of the problem over the course of a year but received no response.
Additionally, after Chinese regulators announced their investigation, a group of law firms said they would be looking into whether Pinduoduo withheld information from investors and whether the company and its representatives violated US federal laws.
Pomerantz LLP, one of the firms that were involved in the investigation, is now representing investors in the latest round of lawsuits. Other firms include Wolf Haldenstein Adler Freeman & Herz LLP. Also, an as of yet uncertified class action suit has been filed against the company by the Schall Law Firm.
This week, Pinduoduo said in an open letter that between August 2 and August 9 it had removed over 4 million listings of counterfeit goods and closed more than 1,000 stores on its platform. The company announced it had also reported 36 companies to the market regulator in Shanghai’s Changning District.
“We are fully aware that problems that existed in the past should not continue to exist in the future,” the company said in the letter, laying out plans to combat counterfeit goods in the future.
However, as losses have already been incurred and with three lawsuits having been accepted by US courts, the company’s intended changes may have come too late.
]]>Rumors of ofo’s acquisition by Didi Chuxing are once again proliferating, with reports claiming the deal could be worth $2 billion.
Minority shareholders have begun receiving documents about the deal, according to local media. However, ofo co-founder Yu Xin has denied the rumors, saying the company had dealt with them on Monday (August 20) and again on Wednesday (August 22).
Xiao Min, partner at Matrix Partners China, lead investor in ofo’s series B, said in China Entrepreneur Magazine that the rumors are “fake news.”
Rumors of Didi’s acquisition of the last independent bike rental company have been circulating for months. The original deal was thought to be $1.5 billion, almost half of that of Meituan purchase of Mobike.
Additionally, the company’s cash crunch has been well documented. In an attempt to generate additional income it began selling advertising on its bicycles and within its app. The move was blocked by local governments shortly after. However, the company resumed selling advertising within its app yesterday (August 22) with the launch of five-second video ads.
People close to the matter say the company has paid off just 20% of its RMB 3 billion debt. ofo also mortgaged its bicycles for an RMB 1.77 billion loan from Alibaba. ofo co-founder and CEO Dai Wei once likened the company’s troubles to the film “Darkest Hour,” imploring employees to fight to the end.
Also, the company has retreated from international markets, claiming that it was focussing on regions it deemed to be of “priority.” The company has already left or is in the process of leaving India, Germany, the US, Spain, Australia, and South Korea.
Amid its international exits, ofo has faced increased difficulties at home. Mobike recently did away with deposits to standardize its platform, while HelloBike has been winning the battle in lower-tier cities. Additionally, apart from the ban on advertising on its bikes, local officials have moved to limit the number of bicycles on the streets.
]]>Recently-listed social e-commerce giant Pinduoduo has closed 1,128 stores and removed nearly 4.3 million listings from its platform in response to concerns over the sale of counterfeit goods.
The company issued an open letter stating that the removals were made between August 2 and August 9. Representatives at the company said that in light of recent public grievances, they had realized that the platform has many problems including lack of attention to intellectual property protection.
“We are fully aware that problems that existed in the past should not continue to exist in the future,” the company said.
According to the letter, Pinduoduo has already reported 36 businesses that infringe on copyrights to the Changning District Market Supervision Administration in Shanghai. It said Pinduoduo would continue to report suspected illegal companies to the relevant local market supervisor.
Pinduoduo said while it upgrades its merchant verification system, it would be manually verifying stores on its platform. It also said that it would continue investing in technology and its workforce and that it plans to set up an intellectual property service center while encouraging merchants to apply for trademarks.
This is not the first time the company has launched a crackdown on counterfeit and low-quality goods. In June, it found itself at odds with storeowners after freezing the accounts of stores it found selling fake products. Merchants responded by protesting at the company’s headquarters in Shanghai.
Since its Nasdaq listing, Pinduoduo has faced increased scrutiny from regulators, investors, and law firms. Audio-visual equipment manufacturer Skyworth demanded the company remove all listings of counterfeit Skyworth products from its platform. This eventually led to the State Administration for Market Regulation ordering Shanghai’s Industry and Commerce Bureau to launch an investigation causing the company’s share price to tank.
As a result, seven US law firms launched an additional investigation on behalf of investors who incurred losses shortly after the IPO. The firms’ focus is on whether Pinduoduo misled and withheld information from public investors and whether the company and its representatives violated US federal laws.
Pinduoduo’s IPO has also started conversations about income inequality in China, with a vast majority of its users being low-income earners, highlighting the need to tailor business models to this bracket of the population.
]]>Up to 3 Billion Pieces of User Data Stolen From Nearly 100 Tech Companies —Caixin Global
What happened: A third-party developer for Chinese mobile operators—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—highjacked over 3 billion pieces of user data from some of the country’s biggest tech companies. Through a business partnership formed in 2014, Shenzhen-listed Ruizhi Huasheng Technology collected user account information from Tencent, WeChat, Alibaba, and up to 93 other companies after placing malicious software on the mobile operators’ servers.
Why it’s important: Ruizhi Huasheng used the data for commercial gain by selling it to advertisers. Revenue from the company’s data-related business increased 16 fold over the past year, rising to RMB 30 million ($4.4 million). The case is the latest in a spate of high profile data breaches. Earlier this year, an investigation found that the personal information of people using delivery apps—including Ele.me and Baidu Waimai—was being sold for as little as RMB 0.10 per individual. The government has sought to crack down on these sorts of data breaches through the release of standards for handling personal information, but steps like these have had little effect on the illicit, but very lucrative, data market.
]]>AI system recognizes porn through voice recognition – Xinhua
What happened: An artificial intelligence platform that detects pornographic content through voice recognition began testing on Sunday (August 19). The Alibaba-developed system is scheduled to be put into operation in September, although where it will be used has not been specified. It is able to identify content in multiple languages including English, Japanese, Chinese, and Russian, as well as a number of local dialects online and offline.
Why it’s important: The Chinese government has escalated the intensity of an online crackdown this year, banning content it believes to be “vulgar” or “inappropriate.” Short video platforms have been some of the hardest hit, with numerous companies being forced to intensify their monitoring efforts, which now often require teams of thousands of individuals. AI has seen increased usage in automating these processes and systems like Alibaba’s porn detecting platform will result in more of these sorts of content being identified, flagged, and removed.
]]>JD to monetize logistics assets – China Daily
What happened: JD will establish a logistics assets management company with the aim of monetizing its logistics assets, including 2.5 million square meters of warehouse space. The announcement was made by Sidney Huang, the chief financial officer of JD, in a conference call.
Why it’s important: Competition between JD and its rival is increasing. Alibaba has announced ambitious plans for its logistics division to bring even quicker delivery services to consumers in China and the rest of the world. JD’s move also comes after it announced a marked decrease in year-on-year profit and an increase in expenses. The company put this down to investing in technology through research and development. However, it is now looking to make up its losses using already available assets.
]]>Chinese hackers targeted U.S. firms, government after trade mission: researchers – Reuters
What happened: Chinese hackers reportedly operating out of Tsinghua University probed American companies and government departments before and after trade talks with the US in May. According to cybersecurity firm Recorded Future, the group targeted energy and communications companies, as well as the Alaskan state government, seeking espionage opportunities.
Why it’s important: The trade tensions between China and the US have caused substantial damage to cyberspace cooperation between the two countries, which sought to stop industrial cyber espionage. In 2015, the topic was seen positively in the broader scope or US-China relations. However, given the current climate, it is unlikely that this is still the case. Additionally, the hacking accusations are the latest in a slew that includes the targetting of Malaysia, Belarus, Maldives, Cambodia, and European foreign ministries.
]]>Tencent posts first profit decline since 2005 on lower gaming revenue, investment gains – SCMP
What happened: Chinese tech giant Tencent has reported a 2% drop in second-quarter profit as a result of lower gaming revenue and investment-related gains. The company’s net income fell to RMB 17.9 billion ($$2.6 billion) compared to the RMB 19.3 billion analysts expected. Tencent’s sales also missed expectations, with its mobile-gaming business reporting a decline of 19% compared to the previous quarter.
Why it’s important: Tencent’s has already lost $150 billion in market value since January. Shortly after reporting its Q2 earnings, its share price fell by 3.6%. In April, the company lost over $20 billion in value after early investor Naspers trimmed its stake by 2%. This was followed by Tencent’s president Martin Lau selling one million of his shares in the company. Most recently, the company was stricken by regulators ordering the removal of “Monster Hunter: World” from Tencent’s WeGame platform. The country’s content regulator said it had received complaints about the game. The removal was followed by Tencent losing $15 billion in value over concerns about gaming revenue.
]]>Tencent games revenue in focus after China blocks “Monster Hunter: World” – Reuters
What happened: A stock price tumble wiped out over $15 billion in Tencent’s market value amid concerns about its gaming revenue. The fall came after regulators blocked the sale of blockbuster game “Monster Hunter: World” on Tencent’s WeGame platform. Analysts expected the Capcom-developed game to be one of Tencent’s biggest sellers but its listing disappeared within a week of its release after regulators reportedly received a large number of complaints about its content.
Why it’s important: China’s entertainment industry has increasingly been at odds with regulators in recent months. Short video platforms and video game distributors and developers have been hit hard in a crackdown on “vulgar” and “inappropriate” content in a government-led move to increase its control over cultural content. Tencent had to alter “PlayerUnknown Battleground” (PUBG) last year before it was allowed to distribute the game as it was deemed too violent. Additionally, after China’s content regulator went through reforms, many firms are still waiting to be granted licenses for new games which have been on hold since March.
]]>Chinese co-working space provider Ucommune has raised RMB 300 million ($43.5 million) in Series C funding, increasing its valuation to $1.8 billion.
The round is led by Prosperity Holdings, which also led Ucommune’s pre-C round in July 2017. The company, previously known as UrWork, is a major competitor to WeWork China, which raised $500 million in July.
Ucommune has raised a total of $450 million since 2016. Its investors have included Gopher Asset Management, Zhongrong International Trust, and Jingrong Holdings. Prior to its recent round, it received RMB 110 million in venture funding from the Shenzhen-based Qianhai Wutong Mergers and Acquisitions Funds (前海梧桐并购基金) in January.
The company grew its working spaces rapidly in the first half of 2018, increasing from 2.5 million square feet of managed space to of 6.2 million square feet.
Ucommune has been on a spending spree recently, following acquisition with acquisition. In July, the company purchased Shanghai-based co-working company Workingdom for RMB 300 million, the same amount it has just raised.
This was preceded by the acquisition of co-working service provider New Space in January. In March, Ucommune acquired Chinese co-working space Woo Space. During the same month, the company bought Wedo Union, a community-based co-working and incubation enterprise that also received funding from ucommune in 2017.
]]>Zhejiang’s Provincial Bureau of Industry and Commerce (ZBIC) issued a letter of recommendation to Tencent late last month in response to a number of incidents of WeChat Pay users being defrauded by individuals pretending to their WeChat friends. Tencent responded to the letter at the beginning of August, with the matter being made public yesterday (August 13).
The Zhejiang Consumer Protection Committee said it had received complaints of fraudsters copying the WeChat profile picture and name of an individual’s friend, then asking to borrow money, according to local media. When asked to repay the loan, the lender was blocked by the scammer. Individuals affected said they were not helped by Tencent, with the company saying that it could not give out user information for privacy reasons.
“WeChat is no longer a purely social platform. As a financial platform operator, WeChat Pay should balance the relationship between customer privacy protection and property security,” a spokesperson for ZBIC is quoted as saying.
The government department said Tencent should provide more assistance to individuals affected by this sort of fraud.
“[Tencent should] actively cooperate with the judicial authorities to disclose the real information of the other party, and should not use personal privacy protection as a reason to counter the reasonable appeal of users,” the ZPIC continued.
In a letter issued August 1, Tencent detailed some improvements in response to the recommendation letter. The company said it would fully implement WeChat Pay’s real name verification system, not allowing users who have not verified their identity to transfer funds through the platform. The company said that for large transfers it would make the full name of the receiver visible to the sender, not just the last character. It also said it would improve its customer service in the aftermath of fraudulent activity.
Earlier this week (August 13), an investigation found that criminal groups were luring in victims under the guise of educating them about WeChat and Alipay mini programs. They were then duped into paying tens of thousands of RMB for projects that only cost a few hundred.
]]>In the latest IPO news, Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer NIO has filed to list on the New York Stock Exchange. The company hopes to raise up to $1.8 billion.
The company issued its filing to the US Securities and Exchange Commission on August 13. The IPO is being underwritten by JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, and Goldman Sachs, among others. According to previous reports, NIO had plans to file for a US-based listing in September, with the company refusing to comment at that time.
A successful IPO could boost the company’s valuation to around $37 billion, according to previous estimates.
NIO first started generating revenue this year, reporting $6.7 million from vehicle sales and $7 million in total revenue. The company made losses of $759 million in 2017 and more than $500 million in the first six months of 2018. “We have negative cash flows from operation, have only recently started to generate revenues and have not been profitable, all of which may continue in the future,” the company warned in its filing.
NIO began making deliveries of its first batch of ES8 electric cars in June 2018 and is expected to add a second model to its portfolio in 2019. The company plans to launch new models every year in the future.
As of July 31, NIO had delivered just 481 ES8s, with unfulfilled reservations for a further 17,000. Nonetheless, approximately 12,000 of these were made up of orders for which a refundable deposit of RMB 5,000 ($726) had been paid.
Before filing, the company had received a total of $2.1 billion in investment from Tencent, Baidu, Sequoia Capital, and Joy Capital.
The company’s ES8 is touted to be a direct competitor to Tesla’s Model X, which retails in China for around RMB 900,000 compared to the ES8’s price tag of RMB 500,000. Despite the lower cost, NIO lacks the brand name and tested performance behind its US competitor. The company acknowledged this shortcoming in its filing, saying as a new entrant to the industry the company faces significant challenges.
]]>West China’s first international standard 5G network to be launched – China Daily
What happened: China Telecom has launched west China’s first International Telecommunication Union (ITU) standard 5G network in Chengdu, Sichuan. This is reportedly the first time that a multiple base transceiver system (BTS) has been employed in the region. Previously, 5G experiments were conducted in-network, on a singular BTS.
Why it’s important: The new network is representative of China’s ambitions to become a pioneer in the development and deployment of 5G technology, which it hopes to commercialize by 2020. However, most consumers will likely not use the new network until 2021 and beyond. Nonetheless, the country’s private companies are also pushing the development of the technology. Huawei, which recently had its base stations approved for sale in the EU, plans to increase its research and development (R&D) spending to between $15 billion and $20 billion annually.
]]>Weibo revenue surges as China tech groups lift advertising – Nikkei Asian Review
What happened: Chinese microblogging platform Weibo has reported a 68% year-on-year increase in net revenue to reach $426.6 million, driven mostly by ad sales. The company, which has 431 million users, has attracted companies like Alibaba Holdings which have spent millions on their Weibo-focussed digital marketing campaigns. As a result, Weibo’s ad revenue made up 87% of its total for the quarter.
Why it’s important: Weibo has, at times, had trouble holding onto its users. The rise of competing social platforms has played a significant role in this. In 2014, Weibo saw its users drop from 331 million to 275 million. However, it managed to pull through and recently added 20 million users in the second quarter. Advertisers clearly have confidence in the company’s ability to provide an audience for their ads. Alibaba has dedicated an annual RMB 700 million to its digital marketing campaign on Weibo, according to the latter’s Vice President, Cao Fei.
]]>What happened: China’s State Administration of Radio and Television has not granted licenses for new games since March 2018, causing a drastic slowdown in industry growth. Mobile games have been hit the hardest, with year-on-year growth lunging from 50% to 13%. However, industry players have also attributed slowing revenue growth to other factors including market saturation and the rise of short video apps.
Why it’s important: The lack of approvals comes after the State Administration of Radio and Television (SART) was formed in March to replace the State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television (SARFT), which in turn forms part of a broader push by the Chinese government to strengthen its control over cultural policies. Short video platforms such as Douyin have been some of the hardest hit after numerous crackdowns on “vulgar” and “inappropriate” content.
]]>China’s central bank fines four companies 100 million yuan for violating payment service rules – SCMP
What happened: China’s central bank has fined four mobile payment operators a combined RMB 100 million ($14.7 million) in a move to increase oversight in the country’s huge payments sector. Alibaba’s Ant Financial was fined RMB 4.12 million ($604,000), Union Mobile Financial Technology RMB 26.4 million ($3.9 million), and Gopay RMB 46.4 million ($6.8 million). No reasons were given for the punishment, but Alipay said it was due to “certain irregularities” in its payment operations in mainland China.
Why it’s important: The People’s Bank of China (PBoC) has issued 270 licenses to mobile payment providers. However, sources have said that a number of these could be revoked as part of the new cleanup campaign that seeks to better regulate the industry, forcing compliance among other payment operators. Given the massive number of licenses that have been issued, it can be expected that regulators will begin kicking out smaller companies since Alipay and WeChat Pay control the majority of the market and mobile payment systems have gone mainstream.
]]>Following news of Google’s rumored re-entry into the Chinese market, Baidu CEO Robin Li has said he welcomes the competition and that Baidu would “win again.”
Li made the comments on WeChat after reading an article by the People’s Daily. The report stated that Google’s renewed public operations in the country are welcome as long as they stick to local regulations. The piece, which has subsequently been scrubbed from the publication’s social media accounts, said that Google has the will to regain its footing in the country.
However, Li said that by the time Google left China in 2010, Baidu commanded 70% of the search market. And that its international competitor continued to lose its share of the market.
“If Google comes back, we can just face them once again and win again,” he said in the public post. “Over the years, our industrial environment and scale of development have undergone earth-shaking changes…and the world is copying from China.”
In early August rumors began spreading that Google planned to once again operate consumer services in China. Initially, these reports focused on a project entitled Dragonfly—a filtered version of its popular international search engine designed to comply with Chinese regulations. Baidu’s share price tumbled following the news, dropping to the lowest point since the company announced the departure of former COO Lu Qi.
However, subsequent reports have drawn attention to the scope of Google’s roadmap for its Chinese business. It reportedly also has plans to launch its cloud services—including Docs and Drive—in partnership with a local company. The search giant has been in talks with Tencent since January 2018, according to Bloomberg sources. Additionally, the firm announced plans to launch an AI research center in Beijing, and more recently created a WeChat mini program.
In May, a knockoff of the popular search engine was launched by fans of the company. Google-ch (www.google-ch.com) claimed to filter results in compliance with local regulations. At the time of launch, TechNode had trouble accessing the site, possibly due to the influx of traffic.
]]>WeChat will begin cracking down on falsified pageviews and followers on public accounts beginning tomorrow (August 8), local media is reporting.
WeChat said that in order to “ensure the healthy operation of the platform” it would be attempting to eliminate false data, including that created by the use of bots. It said that while there may be some differences between past and new statistical data, it would not have an actual effect on traffic.
“Cracking down on fake views and fake followers is a pretty uncontroversial move. These have always been vanity metrics,” Andrew Schorr, founder of enterprise contact center solutions provider Grata, told TechNode. “We’ve seen clients run campaigns where the vendor was clearly buying followers for the client. You get unbelievable growth numbers during the campaign, then everyone unfollows you over the next couple weeks, and none of your real metrics see any impact,” he said.
Nonetheless, in Tencent’s 2016 crackdown on unwanted bots, public accounts saw a marked drop in activity. At the time owners of some WeChat public accounts, which previously garnered over 10,000 views per article, saw their views diminish by as much as 90%.
Companies have been able to increase their metrics by paying firms that specialize in fake accounts. These firms charge as little as RMB 15 ($2.20) for 1000 views and RMB40 ($5.85) for sharing 100 times. Once payment is made, bots visit the account repeatedly increasing the total number of page views.
This is not the first crackdown Tencent has led recently. Last week, WeChat announced that it had shut down 8,000 groups and 4,000 accounts in the first half of 2018 for spreading investment rumors. Those dealing in false information would pose as legitimate investment advisors and offer tips in exchange for money, with some even going as far as luring in unsuspecting buyers through live streaming services.
]]>Xiaomi Music has reached a copyright transfer agreement with NetEase Cloud Music, continuing the trend of music sharing among platforms after the government banned unlicensed music streaming in 2015.
The agreement will give Xiaomi access to music from HIM International Music and Tianyue Media, including such artists as SHE, Hebe Tien, Yoga Lin, Power Station, and Where Chou.
While Xiaomi Music is not a dominant player in the market, it was the first Chinese smartphone manufacturer to obtain licensing rights to Warner Music’s catalog, shortly after signing agreements with Sony and Universal.
With a smartphone penetration rate of 92 devices for every 100 individuals, China’s music streaming industry is enormous. Over 86% of users listen to music on their mobile phones, creating an increasingly competitive market for music streaming businesses, which is dominated by players including Kuguo Music and QQ Music.
This competition has resulted in various license infringement lawsuits and counter-suits between QQ Music, NetEase Music, Alibaba’s Xiami Music, and Kuguo Music, and competitors in the market. The turbulence eventually led to the government enforcing the previously mentioned music copyright regulations in 2015.
However, since then there has been a growing number of licensing agreements between platforms. Tencent Music and Entertainment (TME) teamed with Ali Music Group in 2017 on music copyrights. The company then reached a cross-licensing agreement with NetEase Music following copyright disputes.
Total revenue for the music streaming sector amounted to $522 million in 2017 and is expected to grow by 130% to reach nearly $1.2 billion by 2022. The average revenue per user (ARPU) will also see triple-digit growth during the same period, increasing from $0.84 to $1.69.
]]>Google is in talks with Tencent and others to bring cloud services to China – SCMP
What happened: Google is said to be in talks with companies including Tencent to offer its cloud-based products in China. Negotiations reportedly began in January 2018. However, there is some uncertainty as to whether the plans will go ahead amid trade tensions between the US and China. While not explicitly mentioning China, Google Cloud chief Diane Greene said last week that she wants the business to be a “global cloud,” while the company is seeking employees in its Shanghai office.
Why it’s important: News broke last week that Google plans to launch a filtered version of its search engine, re-entering the Chinese market for the first time in nearly a decade. Now it seems the company hopes to offer a full range of products in the country. Google, which usually uses its own data centers to run services such as Drive and Docs, will need to find a local partner as regulations require all data be held locally. However, siding with Tencent on a cloud deal could put the company up against Alibaba, which operates a major cloud service in China.
Read more: Is Google partnering with Tencent for its China comeback?
]]>Reports of trade tensions between China and the US in the past few months have been hard to ignore. In early July, the US imposed $34 billion on Chinese goods, prompting the Shenzhen Component Index, dominated by technology and consumer product stocks, to fall to its lowest point since 2014, igniting fears among investors.
“The US tariffs, coupled with a falling yuan, will significantly increase the cost for many Chinese technology companies that rely on imported raw materials, such as semiconductors, integrated circuits, and electric components,” Zhang Xia, an analyst for China Merchants Bank Securities, told the South China Morning Post.
Additionally, the US’s commerce department announced yesterday it will place an embargo on 44 Chinese companies—including the world’s largest surveillance equipment manufacturer Hikvision—for “acting contrary to the national interests or foreign policy of the United States.” The move caused the companies’ share prices to fall by up to nearly 6%.
However, the focus has shifted to more than just the trade war. And a number of big Chinese tech companies have seen their share prices plummet for other reasons.
Pinduoduo, China’s latest e-commerce giant to list on the Nasdaq, found that an initial public offering (IPO) is not a panacea. Conversely, its listing has drawn attention to the company’s counterfeit products. And investors are not happy.
Tencent’s shares have nosedived by over 25% since its peak in January, erasing $143 billion in market value over the past seven months.
Search giant Baidu also hasn’t been immune. The company’s stock price dropped by nearly 8% this week (August 2) following news that Google plans to re-enter the Chinese market.
While IPOs are usually a cause for celebration, Pinduoduo has proven this past week they can also be bad for business. The company—which has integrated e-commerce and social media—caters to low-income consumers living outside first and second-tier cities. It has been plagued by accusations of facilitating the sale of counterfeit low-quality goods.
Just days after going public, the company’s share price tumbled by 16%, falling below its offer price of $19. The drop was, in part, initiated by requests made by television maker Skyworth to remove counterfeit listings of its products from the e-commerce firm’s marketplace.
The company announced this week that it had removed 10.7 million listings of problematic goods (in Chinese). However, this did little to assuage concerns from investors and regulators after the latter launched an inquiry into Pinduoduo’s product listings. It’s stock price dropped to 30% below its closing price on its first day of trading, wiping out over $9 billion in value.
This is unlikely to be helped by the fact that seven US law firms have launched investigations into the company on behalf of its investors. The statement issued by the firms shows that investors suffered financial losses after Chinese regulators began looking into the company’s dealings. The company met today (August 3) with regulators and agreed to improve its products’ vetting procedures.
However, it’s not only e-commerce platforms that have been affected. Video streaming service Bilibili has seen its stock price drop by almost 21% since July 20. The decline comes amid renewed efforts led by the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) to crack down on what it deems to be “vulgar” or “inappropriate” content.
The company has subsequently had its app removed from app stores in the country for one month. Nasdaq-listed Bilibili responded by saying it is “in deep self-review and reflection.”
Baidu, which runs China’s biggest search engine, found that even unconfirmed competition can cause stocks to tumble. In a move which could mark its re-entry into the Chinese market, news broke this week that Google has plans to launch an Android app that could provide filtered results to users in China.
Baidu currently commands nearly 70% of China’s search market, while Google shut down its search engine in China in 2010 over censorship concerns, giving up access to a vast market. China’s online population now exceeds 770 million, double the entire populace of the US and more than that of Europe. An attractive prospect for the US-based tech company.
Baidu’s revenue is still highly dependant on ad revenue, which increased by 25% in the second quarter. Google’s return is clearly seen as a threat, causing Baidu’s stock price to fall from $247.18 on July 31 to $226.83 on August 2. This marks the most significant fall since the company announced the departure of its chief operating officer Lu Qi.
Nonetheless, all losses seem insignificant in comparison to Tencent’s. The company saw its stock price increase by 114% in 2017, reaching a record high in January 2018. However, since then, the price has dropped by nearly $130 per share, eviscerating a considerable portion of its market value. In July alone, its stock price fell by 9.9%. The company’s devaluation tops Facebook’s $130 billion rout following its earnings call last month.
In April, the company lost over $20 billion in value after South African investment and media firm Naspers announced it was trimming its stake by 2%. Additionally, Martin Lau, the company’s president, sold one million of his shares in the company. This, added to the Naspers sale and warnings of margin pressure, led to a loss of $51 billion in market value.
“Investors are increasingly pricing in lower expectations for Tencent’s interim results,” Linus Yip, a strategist at First Shanghai Securities in Hong Kong, told Bloomberg.
Yip expects the downward trend to continue, and not just for Tencent. “Overall, tech companies are facing a similar problem. They have been enjoying fast profit growth in the past few years, so it will be difficult for them to maintain similar growth in the future as the competition grows and some segments are saturated,” he said.
]]>China steps up crackdown on counterfeit goods – People’s Daily
What happened: In the wake of Pinduoduo’s fake goods scandal, China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) has called for companies to crack down on the sale of production and sale of counterfeit goods, trademark infringements, and illegal advertisements. It said that companies involved in the supply chain of sub-standard or counterfeit products would be subject to an investigation.
Why it’s important: Pinduoduo, the social e-commerce giant which went public in the US earlier last week, has been subject to greater scrutiny since its IPO. The SAMR said earlier this week that it would be launching an investigation into the operations of the company. However, it will not only be Pinduoduo that will be punished. The SAMR said that any third parties or companies doing business on an e-commerce platform such as Pinduoduo would be disciplined.
]]>Canaan launches world’s first bitcoin mining TV set – SCMP
What happened: The world’s second largest manufacturer of bitcoin mining rigs Canaan Creative has released a TV set that can mine bitcoin. The device has a processing power of 2.8 trillion hashes a second. For comparison, Canaan’s most powerful rig can process 11 trillion hashes per second. The AvalonMiner Inside TV set can be controlled by voice commands and can calculate mining profitability in real-time.
Why it’s important: The announcement comes after the company submitted an IPO application in Hong Kong in May, which is expected to raise up to $1 billion. The TV set forms part of Canaan’s plan to build a broader user base and enable more home appliances to be used as part of the next generation of blockchain technology. Additionally, the company mentioned the risk of having a single product line in its Hong Kong filing. The addition of the TV to its portfolio can be seen as a way to combat this risk.
]]>China’s Baidu tops profit, revenue expectations on ad sales growth —Reuters
What happened: Baidu’s revenue and profit exceeded expectations as a result of the company’s core ad business. Its net income rose by 45% to RMB 6.4 billion in the second quarter. Ad revenue increased by 25%, reaching RMB 21.1 billion. The company’s total revenue increased by 24.4%, topping the expected 22.4% rise.
Why it’s important: Baidu has learned to negotiate the increasingly strict regulation in China. While other online platforms have been censured for ineffectively policing content, Baidu has managed to emerge unscathed, which reflects in their financial results. The company has also been investing heavily in artificial intelligence (AI) as part of a countrywide push to move from traditional manufacturing to more high tech production. This push would have helped the company as a whole. However, the technology is still in its nascent stage, and analysts believe it will take some time before margin growth increases.
]]>Chinese tech giants Alibaba and Tencent have invested in television show producer Shanghai Canxing Culture & Broadcast Co., in a funding round worth RMB 360 million ($53 million), according to local media.
Tencent’s investment of RMB 160 million was made through its subsidiary, Tibet Qiming Music, while Alibaba’s contribution totaled RMB200 million. The companies hold 0.94% and 1.17% of Canxing’s shares respectively
Canxing initially raised RMB 21 billion in its Round A in December 2017, with the expectation that the company would file for a listing at some point in 2018. The company is the former producer of the popular TV show “Voice of China,” among others. It has created over 20 shows in China, which focus on music and dance. Additionally, the company owns a record label with over 120 artists.
However, Canxing has been embroiled in trademark disputes with the creator of its popular singing show when the company was preparing for the fifth season of “Voice of China.” Later, another television show producer, Zhejiang Talent Television & Film Co. Ltd., bought “The Voice of China” brand along with related IP.
Both Tencent and Alibaba have good reason to invest in Canxing: content. The tech giants will likely incorporate the company’s output into their platforms.
Interestingly, this is not the first time the two rivals have co-invested in individual companies. In early July both firms bought stakes in state-backed media company China Media Capital (CMC). This was followed by talk of the companies’ intentions to invest in advertising firm WPP’s Chinese unit.
]]>Video streaming platform Bilibili has responded to the government-imposed removal of its app from Chinese apps stores by saying that the company intends to fully cooperate with authorities.
The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), along with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), the Ministry of Public Security and three other government agencies, has led a crackdown on low-quality and pirated content, in which Bilibili was targeted.
The sanctions, which were imposed on 19 video platforms, were a result of “vulgar, violent, pornographic or pirated content, and promoting distorted information,” according to authorities. Bilibili’s app has been removed for a period of one month, from July 26 to August 25.
“Bilibili will continue to proactively fulfill its corporate social responsibility, enhance its self-regulation and welcome public supervision to provide better content services for users,” the company said in a statement.
While the temporary ban will not affect existing users, it prevents prospective newcomers to the platform from downloading the app, thereby hurting its traffic. However, the company said the ban would not affect its daily operations.
Regulators have approached online content with increased scrutiny this year, with companies having to police their platforms with extra vigilance in order to escape the clutches of government intervention. Most recently, Douyin removed over 33,000 user accounts, along with 27,578 short videos and 9,415 audio files as part of a cleanup campaign.
In April, the country’s media regulator led a sweeping crackdown on online content. Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Kuaishou were ordered to better manage their content. Shortly after, Jinri Toutiao and two other news aggregators had their apps removed from app stores in the country.
Bytedance was again targeted though Toutiao after it was ordered to permanently close its Neihan Duanzi (内涵段子 “implied jokes”) app for its vulgar content. The company also temporarily removed the ability to live stream content in its Douyin app. The crackdown on short videos was followed by Tencent announcing it would remove the ability to play these videos within its messaging apps WeChat and QQ, a move that led to numerous lawsuits between the company and Bytedance.
]]>According to the local media, an error is displayed within the app when scanning an ofo bicycle’s QR code. The message says that the problem has been partially repaired, but Didi cannot resolve it entirely without ofo. TechNode verified the inability to access the company’s bicycles and found it to be true.
Didi told TechNode that ofo’s service is still available through its app, though some users are encountering errors when trying to access ofo’s bicyles. “The company is working with the relevant parties to solve the issues at the soonest to ensure all the users can enjoy our services,” a Didi spokesperson said, without specifying the cause of the difficulties.
The lack of access to ofo bicycles on Didi’s platform comes at a curious time. Didi is rumored to be closing a deal to acquire the bike rental company, with the two parties still negotiating a price. ofo is said to be valued at around $1.5 billion—almost half the price of Mobike.
创维发严正声明:要求拼多多停止售假 – Caijing
What happened: Chinese audio-visual equipment manufacturer Skyworth has asked social e-commerce company Pinduoduo to remove and stop selling any counterfeit Skyworth products on its platform. The company requires Pinduoduo to stop the sale of these products with immediate effect. It said it has the right to pursue those who were infringing upon its products.
Why it’s important: Pinduoduo has long had a reputation for selling cheap low-quality products and therefore led crackdowns on counterfeit products in the past. These prohibitions have caused outrage among the platforms merchants, who at times, have said the company’s assessment criteria were unfair. Earlier this year, sellers even went as far as protesting at the company’s office in Shanghai. Nonetheless, Pinduoduo will have to remain vigilant and risk upsetting its merchants in the coming months to limit the sale of counterfeit products, particularly after its US-based IPO.
]]>Influencer marketing is nothing new. Celebrities—both real and created—long ago began gracing the celluloid frames of TV commercials, the pages of fashion magazines, and the airwaves, lending an extra something to a brand’s image.
The rise of the internet and the resultant democratization of the creation of media have led to the emergence of a new breed of influencers. These generally self-made individuals, with their millions of followers, represent substantial new opportunities for companies to leverage their influence and content creating skills to better engage with potential customers.
Online influencers, or key opinion leaders (KOLs), are huge in China, particularly in today’s changing online landscape. Traditional e-commerce platforms like Taobao and JD are becoming increasingly social, while social platforms like WeChat and Weibo are more focused on e-commerce. And because of this convergence, the presence of KOLs has become ever more noticeable.
At TechNode’s Tech After Hours event, held recently in Shanghai’s Jing’an district, PARKLU chief marketing officer Elijah Whaley highlighted how KOLs can aid companies in increasing customer engagement and creating more meaningful marketing campaigns. Here are five takeaways from the event.
KOLs have vast numbers of fans for a reason—they are talented content creators, understand the inner workings of the social media platforms on which they operate, and know their followers well. Companies should not approach this sort of marketing with the sole goal of making money—the returns are relatively low. Whaley says that when engaging with a KOL who has around a million followers, companies can expect around 22 sales. However, KOLs can create marketing content that is valuable to those viewing it.
While KOL marketing is useful in creating valuable content that is relevant for select groups of individuals, it is not the solution to every marketing woe. It is useful when combined with already existing marketing campaigns.
Whaley advocates for companies to create their own in-house KOLs, even if the persona is fictitious. While it requires considerable effort, the payoffs are worth it. When teaming with already existing KOLs, companies help to build someone else’s brand. Their campaign results in additional traffic going to the KOLs social media accounts, more followers, and eventually, higher fees being charged for future projects. Instead, companies should focus on creating a KOL within their company that can advocate for their brand.
Bots get a bad rap when it comes to social media. But their influence is not only negative. Even when a KOL has millions of followers, a post will only appear in the feed of 10% of their followers. However, traffic created by bots can trick the system, allowing for more exposure. Companies should be upfront when negotiating with KOLs in order to understand how they use bots to drive traffic.
A high-profile KOL can charge up to $25,000 per campaign. For a startup with a modest budget, it’s a considerable investment. In order to make the most of the content, companies should negotiate with KOLs to make sure they have permission to republish and repurpose content as they see fit. This content can then be used repeatedly on different platforms in order to drive traffic to a company’s own social media accounts and ensure constant engagement.
]]>Huawei to raise minimum annual R&D spending to at least US$15 billion – SCMP
What happened: Huawei will increase its research and development (R&D) spending to between $15 billion and $20 billion annually. The increased budget will allow its R&D department to dedicate 20 to 30% of its financial resources to basic scientific research. The company spent a total of RMB 89.7 billion (US$13.2 billion) on research last year, accounting for 14.9% of its total revenue. It already has a huge team focussed on the development of new technologies, with around 45% of its employees engaging in R&D-related activities.
Why it’s important: The increase in R&D spending comes as Huawei is experiencing resistance in overseas markets. The US, UK, and Australia have all voiced concerns about the company’s technology on security grounds. Despite this, Huawei hopes to spearhead the development and deployment of 5G infrastructure globally, with its 5G base stations already receiving approval for sale within the EU. The additional R&D spending should help it realize these ambitions.
]]>What happened: Bike rental firm Mobike is prohibiting riders from parking outside of specified operational areas. The company has set a boundary that determines how far away from the city center users can park their bikes. If they park outside this zone, they will be alerted by text message. Repeated offenders of parking violations will be fined an unspecified amount, and those who comply will be awarded coupons.
Why it’s important: The move to limit where bikes can be parted comes at a time in which the Chinese government is seeking to regulate bike sharing companies and limit their footprints within major cities. Local governments in numerous cities around the country have banned companies from introducing more bikes in order to counter sidewalks crowded by parked bicycles/ Additionally, some cities have created rules concerning the lifespan of individual bicycles and stopped companies advertising on the bikes and within apps.
]]>The cost of mobile data in China has dropped by more than 46% in the first half of the year compared to the same time last year, according to the government.
The numbers were released by the State Council Information Office, which functions as the chief information office of the Chinese government, at a meeting on July 24 to discuss the development of the telecommunications industry.
Despite the decline in cost, China still lags far behind when it comes to overall internet speed. The country currently ranks 141st globally, with an overall reported download speed of 2.38Mbps. For the sake of comparison, South Korea—ranked 30th worldwide—achieves speeds of 20.63Mbps.
However, government indicators of the country’s average internet speeds are far more optimistic. According to the China Broadband Speed Report, the average speed increased by 2.29Mbit/s to reach an average of 16.40Mbit/s for downloads at the end of 2017. There is also a significant disparity between the speed of the internet in major cities and other areas, with Shanghai and Beijing ranking the highest.
China, which has over 770 million internet users, double the entire population of the US, has goals to both lower the cost of data and improve its speed as part of a government initiative. On July 1, data roaming charges between provinces were dropped. Previously, when moving between provinces, mobile users were required to pay additional fees for using the same network operator outside of their province, much like the charges that apply when using these services internationally. The government also expects overall prices to drop by 30% by the end of the year amid increased usage.
Additionally, government efforts are pushing fiber optics, better 4G coverage, more powerful servers and increased bandwidth for international traffic. The move forms part of the “Digital China” initiative, which was much discussed at this year’s Two Sessions political gathering in Beijing.
]]>Social e-commerce platform Pinduoduo’s (拼多多) share price has been set at $22.80 ahead of its US initial public offering (IPO) tomorrow (July 26), giving it a market value of $28.8 billion, according to local media.
The company’s submission to the Securities and Exchange Commision in the US shows shares were expected to be priced between $16 and $19. However, due to oversubscription, sources say the company decided to raise the price.
Pinduoduo, which was founded in 2015, has quickly become one of the fastest growing e-commerce giants in China. As of April 2018, the company had over 300 million users. In 2017, the three-year-old e-commerce startup’s gross merchandise volume (GMV) exceeded RMB 100 billion–a point that took Taobao five years and JD 10 years to reach.
The company was rumored to have received funding to the tune of $3 billion from Tencent and Sequoia Capital in April. Pinduoduo was of strategic importance to Tencent, which has been expanding into online retail.
Its success has primarily been due to its cheap products and target market. The company mainly focuses on lower-tier cities and low-income users, who have mostly gone ignored by tech giants until recently.
However, despite the company’s quick rise, it has not been immune to controversy. In June, Pinduoduo faced backlash from store owners over who believed it had executed improper standards when evaluating their products after the company conducted a quality audit. The company froze the accounts of shops whose products were deemed to be of low quality. The move eventually led to protests at the company’s office in Shanghai.
]]>Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi has pulled all ads promoting peer-to-peer (P2P) services from its smartphones. The move comes after the company received complaints that fraudulent and ill-moderated financial products were being promoted within its MIUI operating system.
Xiaomi received 429 complaints relating to related risky P2P lending platforms, involving a total of RMB 40 million. The company said the total included the total user funds involved and not the money that has been lost, according to local media.
Yesterday (July 24), Xiaomi users reported that the fraudulent ads were being shown in Xiaomi VIP System Tasks and Xiaomi Sports. The latter is built into Xiaomi’s MIUI operating system and allows users to collect rewards for completing specific tasks, such as downloading videos.
In July 2017, Xiaomi increased its marketing of P2P platforms. As a result, the company made a total of RMB 1.9 billion, or 9.4% of its total revenue, from the promotion of ads in the first quarter of 2018.
When Xiaomi reviews advertisements for approval it requires companies to submit an ICP certificate to prove registration with Chinese authorities, the amount of time the company has operated, proof of registered capital, and a mandatory risk warning.
“Therefore, we were able to provide users with the P2P platform address and contact information we have,” Xiaomi is quoted as saying.
Xiaomi isn’t the only big tech company that has found itself in the spotlight following allegations of P2P financing fraud. On June 10, a crowd of people that had bought products from JD.com’s Feixun (斐讯) gathered in front of the company’s headquarters, claiming that they were“victims of P2P finance.”
Under the pretense of being able to get refunds for buying physical products after downloading an app, users were offered opportunities to invest in financial products in order to get their refunds faster.
]]>In ofo’s latest retreat from the international market, the company is scaling back its operations in the United States after laying off 70% of its staff in the country.
Additionally, three executives from ofo’s US business have resigned in the past two weeks, a source told TechNode. The layoffs were announced internally on July 18, with the company planning to halt operations in numerous US cities. However, exact areas were not specified.
The company has also shuttered its businesses in Germany, India, Australia, the Middle East, and parts of the United Kingdom.
The company was operating in 30 cities across the US, with plans to serve more than 100 by the end of 2018. In April, it announced that it had facilitated more than one million rides in the US during its first three months of operations.
The future of ofo’s e-scooter plans is also unknown, with sources saying it is uncertain whether they will be launched after everyone is gone.
However, a company spokesperson said the company is focussing on what it deems to be priority markets in order to move towards profitability. “We are communicating with our local markets about plans going forward,” ofo said, without specifying on which markets the company plans to focus.
Nonetheless, talk of ofo’s financial woes has been circulating for the past few months. In June, a source told TechNode that the company had laid off nearly half of its 60 employees at its Singapore office. Additionally, ofo co-founder Yu Xin denied claims that the company was retrenching 50% of its staff in China due to cash trouble. The company countered news of the layoffs by sending lawyers letters to media companies involved in writing what the company referred to as slanderous and defamatory articles.
After Australia, ofo exits Germany amid push into priority markets
Interestingly, Xu also denied that its international operations were being shut down following the departure of COO Zhang Yanqi. However, in early July ofo announced that co-founder and CEO Dai Wei would begin overseeing its global business.
In addition, ofo’s Chinese business began selling advertising on its bicycles and in its app in May. This, however, was short-lived as some cities moved to ban placed ads on bikes. This, along with a limitation on the number of bicycles allowed on city streets and an imposed lifespan on bicycles, has made the bike-rental industry a difficult one to make profitable.
]]>Germany has become the latest market from which Chinese bike-sharing firm ofo will make an exit. The company, which has been plagued by rumors of a cash crunch over the past few months, has adjusted its overseas operations in line with its plans to focus on priority markets.
ofo has begun scaling back its international operations in numerous regions around the globe, including Australia, the Middle East, India, and the United Kingdom.
The company had placed 3000 bicycles in the German capital of Berlin. These will be transferred to other areas in Europe, according to reports. However, ofo said it had not ruled out the option of returning to the country in the future.
ofo previously announced operations in the United Kingdom, the United States, Australia, Austria, the Czech Republic, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Malaysia, the Netherlands, Russia, Singapore, Spain, Portugal, Israel, Hungary, India, and France.
However, in early July, the company said in a statement that it would be focussing its attention on markets that it deemed to be priorities. The company also announced that co-founder and CEO Dai Wei would oversee its global business.
Ofo fires staff in India, winds down operations in the country
Interestingly, in June, fellow co-founder Yu Xin denied reports the company would be closing its international business following the departure of COO Zhang Yanqi. Yu also rebutted news that the company was facing a cash shortage and it had laid off 50% of its staff.
However, news of the company leaving numerous countries around the world again calls attention to the claims that the company is in financial trouble.
The bike-sharing market in China is extremely competitive, with the two biggest players—ofo and Mobike—battling for market dominance. Amid increasingly tight rules in Chinese cities which restrict the number of bicycles allowed on their streets and, at times, prohibit advertising on the bikes themselves, bike-sharing firms are finding it more and more difficult to achieve profitability.
]]>After closing its $200 million Series C+ funding round in June, Shanghai-based facial recognition firm Yitu Technology has secured another $100 million. The investment comes from China Industrial Asset Management, according to a Yitu statement.
The company’s technology has been deployed for use with the country’s ubiquitous surveillance systems. According to Yitu’s website, public security bureaus in Xiamen, Wuhan, Suzhou, and Ningbo make use of their Dragonfly Eye identification system. Additionally, the company provides facial recognition at the country’s borders and in verification systems for the financial sector. It also offers technologies that enable natural language processing (NLP) and artificial intelligence chips.
What real-world problems can AI really solve? An interview with YITU Technology
The company’s recent funding rounds have been supported predominantly by banks. “It is believed that the financial industry experience of new investors can help Yitu Technology expand in the whole industry faster,” the company said.
In June, the company received $200 million in investment from ICBC International, Gaocheng Venture Capital, and SPDB International. It completed its Gaorong Capital-led Series A in 2015, followed by a YF Capital-led Series B in 2017. It then received RMB 380 million in Series C investment from Hillhouse Capital, Sequoia Capital, and YF Capital, among others in 2017. Earlier this year, it opened its first international office in Singapore.
The Chinese government has set up a roadmap for the domestic development of AI technology. It hopes to catch up to the rest of the world by 2020 and spearhead the technology’s innovation by 2030. The country is home to a number of high profile AI companies including SenseTime, the world’s most valuable company in this space.
In 2017, Chinese startups received 48% of all AI investment worldwide, surpassing the US for the first time. Additionally, over 900 patents relating to facial recognition were filed in the country during the same period.
]]>Nanjing is set to turn itself into a chip mecca by setting up a $20 billion investment fund for its integrated circuits industry. The historical capital of China is hoping that revenue from the sector will reach $150 billion by 2025.
The Nanjing Integrated Circuit Industry Investment Fund is expected to benefit chip manufacturers and downstream companies, which will gain economically from domestically produced chips. It will be guided by localization, specialization, and better use of capital, and aims to promote the local IC industry, local media reports. The timeline for the fund was not specified.
Nanjing has been the focus of growing attention in China’s chip-making industry. In early July, Huatian Technologies announced a three-phase development plan for an IC packaging an testing plant in the city. The company plans to spend a total of $8 billion on the project that will focus on memory and artificial intelligence chips, as well as microelectromechanical systems (MEMS).
In addition to Huatian, Taiwanese chipmaking giant TSMC and Tsinghua Unigroup have built plants in Nanjing. In 2016, TSMC signed an agreement with the municipal government to make a $3 billion investment in the city in the form of a design service center.
In the past few months, China’s reliance on foreign-made chips has called to attention. The temporary US ban on ZTE purchasing American-made components caused collective reflection on the county’s use of technology that was not domestically made. Local experts said the company should have been more self-sufficient (in Chinese).
Additionally, Chinese officials launched investigations into American and South Korean chipmakers for suspected price-fixing. Investigators were concerned about the increasing prices of chips from Samsung, SK Hynix, and US-based Micron.
China currently sources around 90% of the semiconductors used in domestically-produced products from foreign companies, accounting for 60% of the world’s chip purchases.
]]>It is impossible to browse the internet or read the newspaper these days without being informed of the dire threat of a US-China trade war. In the past few months, Donald Trump has taken aim at China’s trade policy and its theft of American intellectual property. He argues that China, among other countries, have large commercial imbalances—exporting far more than they import—and takes that as an indicator of unfair trade deals.
Most recently, the US imposed tariffs of $34 billion on Chinese goods, and more are anticipated. China is expected to retaliate by imposing its own duties on American-made agricultural and energy products.
But speakers at RISE in Hong Kong took more of an optimistic stance on the much-discussed tensions between the two countries, believing that when it comes to companies expanding internationally, the market itself can solve the problem.
“I think it’s going to be hard in North America and Western Europe in the short term, but in the long term, the best innovation wins,” said CloudFlare CEO Matthew Prince.
Prince referred to the story of musical.ly, the Bytedance-owned short video app, which he said “caught fire among 15-year-old girls in California and built an enormous following,” after being founded China. Bytedance also owns Douyin, known internationally as Tik Tok, and is making globalization a key strategy.
“I think the more that we can cross-pollinate the culture between China and the rest of the world, the better it is,” Prince said.
John Zhao, chairman and CEO at Hony Capital, shared Prince’s sentiment. He said that China has an enormous market, and its advances in data science, biotechnology, and the size of its market have begun to show. This, he believes, coupled with the US’s strengths in accumulative innovation, “create value for everybody.”
“I don’t see how that could be stopped,” he commented.
In June, the US Treasury Department began drafting measures that would prevent companies with more than 25% Chinese ownership from acquiring companies that develop “industrially significant technology,” citing national security concerns. Earlier in the year, legislators looked to update an already existing committee that would have a similar effect. This would stop Chinese firms from acquiring companies that, for instance, also produce tech for the US military.
Zhao thinks that the threats posed to Chinese companies by these proposed measures have been blown out of proportion.
“If you read from the press or listen to politicians rhetoric it feels that way. We’ve always invested in the US, just like we’ve brought US [companies] to China. We haven’t run into what we thought was unfair [practices],” he said.
However, he admits he is concerned about the direction of the discourse. “I hope people deal with the matter according to laws and regulations and don’t make a political issue out of that,” he adds.
Nonetheless, “the matter” has become inherently political on both sides of the Pacific. In April, telecommunications manufacturer ZTE was banned from sourcing components from American companies after it violated US sanctions on Iran. The prohibition has subsequently been lifted after ZTE paid nearly $2 billion in fines, but it lost a substantial amount of its market value.
Huawei has also been caught up in proposed and existing limitations of its overseas business. In the US, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is citing national security concerns to prevent local companies that use its equipment from accessing federal funds. Huawei submitted a filing in response stating that its competitors are responsible for setting up the roadblocks. Consumers have also been warned against using both Huawei and ZTE smartphones.
Similar moves are reportedly being made in Australia, in which lawmakers are seeking to ban the company’s 5G rollout in the country. The company was also accused of meddling in local politics, with the Huawei sponsoring more of the county’s federal politicians overseas travel than any other company.
One of Trump’s major rationalizations for imposing trade tariffs on China is its alleged intellectual property (IP) theft. According to the Global Innovation Policy Center (GIPC), an affiliate of the US Chamber of Commerce, China ranks 25th out of the 50 countries surveyed regarding (IP) rights. The GIPC says that the number of IP infringements remains high, while the interpretation of IP laws is not on par with international standards.
“I think that China has gotten to the point where they had better [improve] their [intellectual] property law or their practices just for the sake of their own development,” said Zhao.
Some foreign companies entering China are required to find local partners to operate in the country. This has been a point of contention and seen as a risk to the IP of foreign companies. However, Zhao doesn’t seem to think finding a local partner is negative, adding that it takes place in the US and China.
“…I am very puzzled why all of a sudden finding a local partner to access the market is such a bad thing. There are issues like IP protection, but again, a lot of these issues can be worked out by continuing to work together to get a rule-based system that is mutually understood and respected,” he said.
Zhao’s take may be a little naive. TechNode reported in June that IP theft has become a particular problem with the internet of things (IoT) devices. When companies choose to manufacture their products in China, local partners have unfettered access to the IP. Having gained it legally, there is little that can be done if it is stolen.
However, both men remained optimistic, despite the current trade difficulties and IP protection woes.
“While politicians need to sort out all of the disputes, people sitting in this room and at exchanges like will push it forward. So I do see Chinese companies, just like US companies, will be more and more global,” said Zhao.
“I welcome competition from Chinese companies,” said Prince. “I hope that it becomes easier for Chinese companies to come to the US, and I hope that the optimistic case of the trade war is it will be easier for US technology companies to come to China.”
]]>Self-driving cars are a big deal in China. The country’s three tech giants—Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent (BAT)—are all working to develop the technology. In support of these companies and the many other startups operating in the autonomous driving space, the Chinese government is even working on a draft bill mandating that 50% of all vehicles sold by 2020 be autonomous or semi-autonomous.
Despite the government’s optimistic outlook, Didi CTO and co-founder Bob Zhang believes that mass adoption of self-driving vehicles is at least a decade away.
“I think there are two ways to commercialize autonomous driving technology,” Zhang told attendees at RISE in Hong Kong. “First, enter into a rideshare network to provide services to passengers. Second, to sell self-driving cars to consumers. The second way will not happen on a very large scale in the next ten years.”
He believes that it is not a lack of interest in the vehicles that will limit adoption, but technological hindrances.
“The reason behind that is it still needs a long way to go before the technology is mature enough to drive safely in any weather conditions and any road condition,” he said. “During this time it does not make sense to have a self-driving car which can only drive on sunny days or good road situations.”
This doesn’t mean that Zhang believes the vehicles won’t be used. He explains that given ride-sharing companies know your origin and destination, they can decide whether the conditions are right to dispatch an autonomous vehicle.
“If we are confident we will dispatch this request to a self-driving car. If we are not we will dispatch to a human driver,” he said. “That, in my mind, is the mixed model between human drivers and self-driving cars.”
Zhang also claims that by the time autonomous cars are ready for mass adoption, consumers would have moved away from a vehicle ownership model. “The relationship between people and the vehicle will be redefined. Fewer people will choose to own a car, but just share one.”
Additionally, the car, along with all its sensors, will go from being a passive part of smart infrastructure management to a comprehensive array of sensors that will report road conditions to relieve congestion, something that Zhang said Didi is already working on today.
“The core technology behind that is Didi has the ability to predict the queue length of the vehicles ahead of every crosswalk. For example, if a Didi vehicle stops 10 meters ahead of the crosswalk we can predict there will be three vehicles ahead of it,” he said.
According to a report by Deloitte, China currently has over 500 smart city projects, with Internet of Things (IoT) platforms being an agent of change in the country’s urban spaces. These IoT devices collect data from around the country’s cities, helping to increase the flow of people and traffic, and attempting to improve the lives of a city’s residents. More data being collected from cars will not only result in better training data for future autonomous vehicles but also data to improve the general state of cities and their roadways.
]]>China has grand schemes for its technological development. In addition to the country’s AI plan, which the country hopes will make it a world leader in artificial intelligence by 2030, the “Made in China 2025” initiative highlights the nation’s development roadmap for next few years.
The program, which has drawn Donald Trump’s ire, aims to shift China’s economy to high tech industries, including robotics and chipmaking. But as the country moves towards more advanced manufacturing, it is thrust into a fierce contest of nations, one which developed countries are used to winning.
China began to ponder its over-reliance on foreign technology in 2013 when Edward Snowden exposed the clandestine relationship between the National Security Agency and American tech companies. Five years later, in 2018, this reliance was again called to attention after ZTE was temporarily sanctioned from sourcing components from American manufactures for violating a US export ban.
This competition with other nations and self-consciousness have led to the country taking great strides in its technological abilities in the past five years. But has it exceeded the abilities of its international rivals?
“I think we should make a distinction between technology and innovation,” Harry Hui, founding partner at ClearVue Partners, said at RISE in Hong Kong. “The US clearly does lead in this regard as far as technological innovation in the digital realm globally.”
He explains that within the Chinese market, domestic companies are seeing exponential growth in adoption. “They have this large domestic market base and access to vast amounts of data, and they can react so much quicker.”
In China, the failure of foreign tech companies has at times been attributed to protectionist policies that promote the development of local companies to the detriment of their international counterparts. There may be some truth to this, but these companies also try to enter the market while approaching it as an additional source of income, rather than their primary market, unlike their Chinese competitors.
The answer as to whether Chinese tech has overtaken that of the rest of the world is not a simple one and depends on which aspect the technology industry is being scrutinized.
“Yes and no,” Bessie Lee, founder of Withinlink, said when asked whether China is, in fact, more advanced. Lee explained that while the country may be technologically advanced, it lacks basic protections to keep its citizens safe from the technology that is being developed.
“In certain areas, China is doing really well, like mobile, e-commerce, and social,” she said. “But in other areas like users’ privacy protection, they’re not,” adding that technology can be used to best protect users’ privacy, but it is not being developed in China.
Chen Lei, CEO of Xunlei, believes that is not the regulation that governs the use of technology that is the problem, but more social issues that affect development. “There are way too many schemers and people who are not responsible with the technology that they are handling,” he said.
He believes that while China has been late in developing existing technologies, it will become a leader in current emerging technologies. “[China has] a lot of catching up to do. But in blockchain and artificial intelligence, I think China does have a big opportunity to overtake at the corner.”
The Chinese government has been actively pushing blockchain projects in the country. The technology was even written into the country’s 13th Five-Year Plan in 2016. China subsequently filed the world’s highest number of blockchain patents in 2017. It has been looking at solutions for blockchain-based identity, begun issuing blockchain-backed tax invoices, set up a system to monitor ex-prisoners, and created a number of research facilities.
China’s government is harnessing its data to make blockchain-based identity a reality
“I also see a lot of Chinese startups and entrepreneurs are really focused on the application of blockchain and the related technologies to change the world and benefit society,” said Chen.
He said that China allows for innovation by letting businesses grow and develop before trying to regulate them. “I think that has given Chinese companies plenty of time to develop the technology itself.”
Lee believes that while China may be lacking behind in technology like chipmaking now, in a few years that won’t be the case. “There is actually quite a lot of effort, investment, and devotion on the central government level into the areas where now on the surface it may look like China is lacking behind the US. Give them a couple of years and the game will turn,” she said.
“Chinese are going to take on the US market, but the US are not going to take on the Chinese market the way we do,” she commented.
]]>Bike rental firm ofo has asked its staff that formed part of its Indian operations to leave, a move that further draws attention to the company’s rumored cash crunch. Individuals with knowledge of the matter told TechNode that the company is winding down operations in the region and that most of the company’s staff have been laid off.
In June, a member of ofo’s senior management informed local managers that he would be visiting to discuss the company’s roadmap in the region. He instructed employees to retrieve the company’s bicycles under the pretense that the company would be starting to charge for trips, which were free during its first few months of operation. However, employees were then informed that they would be required to leave.
Ofo has now stopped operating in all cities but Pune, in the western state of Maharashtra. The company launched its city operations in the region in April. ofo promised that it would provide staff, the majority of whom were employed as consultants, with official offer letters. It also said employees would be shown an operational roadmap for the next few years. These didn’t materialize, and individuals were not given the option to relocate to other areas in which the company operates after they were fired.
The company’s website states that ofo has bikes in Bengaluru, Dehli, Chennai, Pune, Ahmedabad, Coimbatore, and Indore. It initially launched pilot programs in gated communities, university campuses, and hospitals. It partnered with Indian mobile wallet and e-commerce company Paytm to facilitate payments.
An ofo spokesperson responded by saying that the company’s rapid expansion in the last year gave it a better understanding of its international business. “Our focus now is on our priority markets and moving towards profitability. We are communicating with our local markets about our plans moving forward,” the spokesperson commented. The company said that it had no intention to deceive its employees during the bike collection process, and was trying to optimize its operations in a period of uncertainty, adding that it aims to exit the market responsibly.
This is not the first time there has been news of layoffs at ofo’s international offices. In June, a source told TechNode that the company had slashed nearly half of its 60-strong team in Singapore. Ofo co-founder Yu Xin denied claims that it was laying off 50% of its staff in China due to cash trouble and that the company’s international operations were being shut down following the departure of chief operating officer (COO) Zhang Yanqi. The company countered news of the layoffs by sending lawyers letters to media companies involved in writing what the company referred to as slanderous and defamatory articles.
ofo recently started selling advertising on its bicycles and in its apps, attempting to boost revenue amid increasing cash strain. Talk of the company’s cash problems has made news in the past few months. People close to the matter said that the company has paid off just 20% of its RMB 3 billion debt. ofo also mortgaged its bicycles for an RMB 1.77 billion loan from Alibaba.
The bike rental industry has become increasingly frenzied in the past few months. Some local governments in China, which is the company’s biggest market, have gotten involved by imposing rules that prohibit advertising on bikes, banned new bikes being brought into cities, and also stipulated the lifespan of bikes in some instances.
Update July 10, 2018, 15:44: Added an additional response from ofo.
]]>China Mobile could rollback its 3G networks by 2020, shortly after China’s official commercialization of 5G, according to local media.
According to China Mobile’s 5G rollout plan, it will begin testing the networks in 2019 with mass deployment by 2020. This could reportedly coincide with the rollback of its 3G networks.
During the Global Device Summit at the 2018 Mobile World Congress in Shanghai, the company released its guidelines for 5G devices. In it, the company stated that it no longer requires devices to support a 3G standard (TD-SCDMA) that is commonly used in China. The guidelines did specify that devices would need to support a number of LTE standards and GSM.
Should China Mobile scale back their slower networks in favor of newer technology, they will not be the first to do so. In April, China Unicom announced plans to roll back its 2G networks, in favor of 4G infrastructure, and in a few years, 5G.
In May, China Mobile let an education effort to allow its subscribers know that they would not need to replace their 4G SIM cards and that they would not use more data when making the switch to 5G. However, they did say that new devices would need to be used in order to utilize the faster speeds.
In April, China’s three big operators—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—started testing 5G in 16 cities including Hangzhou, Shanghai, Xiong’an, Shenzhen, Lanzhou, and Chengdu. The country aims to be at the forefront of 5G rollout and deployment.
Providers of 5G infrastructure are also pushing the deployment of newer networks. Huawei has invested more than $600 million in 5G research since 2009, the same year 4G networks went into operation. It was also the first company to receive approval to sell its 5G base stations in the EU.
]]>Meituan-owned bike rental firm Mobike has removed deposits for all users in China in an effort to standardize its deposit system.
In May, the company began trialing deposit-free rides in Hefei, Hangzhou, Dongguan, and other cities. The trial area was then extended to one hundred areas around the country, including second and third-tier cities. However, a number of first-tier cities were excluded from the trial.
Deposit-free rides will now be standard across the country. Existing users can apply to have their deposits refunded. According to a Mobike representative, if a warning appears in the app when you try to use the platform after being refunded, you will need to update the app. If it is up to date, the server is giving an old message, and it will work nonetheless.
The move could make the company more competitive in the battle for market share against its main rival ofo.
Deposit systems within bike rental applications have been a contentious issue over the past few years. Before being taken over by Didi, Bluegogo’s vice-CEO Hu Yufei admitted that the deposits had formed part of the company’s operating budget. Additionally, Coolqi also ignited fears shortly before going under. The company said it would no longer refund deposits through WeChat, and required users to visit an office in Chengdu, Sichuan to get their money back, causing the government to step in.
Mobike has also announced bike rental integration into the Meituan platform, a new fleet of e-bikes to extend transportation range for its users, and a program to recycle components from retired bicycles.
The waste created by out of service bicycles has been a cause for concern in recent months. Thousands of retired bicycles can be seen on the outskirts of cities. It was also revealed that bikes had been deliberately damaged in some cases. In May, a bicycle graveyard was found in Chengdu containing hundreds of broken ofo bikes.
]]>Bytedance’s short video app Douyin (抖音) will establish an official program for multi-channel networks (MCNs) to manage key opinion leaders (KOLs) on its platform, according to a report.
MCNs are agencies that work with multiple channels or content creators to gain success on video platforms. Previously Douyin was against these companies, which approached KOLs privately. MCNs would use Douyin to gain KOLs and fans and then move them across to a competitor, thereby reducing traffic.
Additionally, Douyin initially recruited and paid KOLs from other social networks in order to accelerate its growth. “Douyin was one of the first social networks in China to have really leveraged the influence and content of KOLs in this way,” Elijah Whaley, chief marketing officer of Parklu, told TechNode.
According to Whaley, directly employing KOLs ensured Douyin had a constant source of high-quality content and was able to attract significant numbers of new users through the KOLs.
“Obviously, the strategy worked beautifully, and now that Douyin is at scale, so they don’t need to employ KOLs any longer,” he said.
Douyin will gradually transfer already signed KOLs to officially approved MCNs. MCNs will be selected to be included in the Douyin MCN program based on their operational and content production capabilities. Selections will be made based on an entities number of accounts, historical page views, and month-by-month growth.
The company will then recommend fans (in the millions range) to the MCNs in batches, and a three-way contract will be signed between Douyin, MCNs, and KOLs.
In allowing MCNs to operate through official channels, Douyin is effectively regulating their operation on its platform, and making MCNs responsible for the quality of the content that the KOLs produce. “Douyin is transferring the cost, management, and difficulty of maintaining a KOL community to the MCNs,” Whaley said. “Douyin’s bread and butter is advertising, and that’s where they want their core focus. This is a smart and natural move on the part of Douyin.”
Douyin’s parent company Bytedance has made headlines in the past few months for its legal spats with competitors. Most recently, the company filed an RMB 10 million lawsuit against Baidu for unfair competition. The case came just a few weeks after a very public disagreement with Tecent after the social media giant blocked Bytedance content on its messaging apps. Prior to this, Tencent filed an RMB 1 lawsuit against Bytedance for damaging its reputation on Douyin and Toutiao.
Updated July 5, 2018, 14:00: Added comments from Elijah Whaley, chief marketing officer of Parklu
]]>Tencent Games has updated its warning system for account holders when minors overspend on its platform. The system will send out a warning when underage players are suspected of spending RMB 500 or more per month.
The system, entitled “Underage User Game Spending Reminder” (未成年人遊戲消費提醒, our translation), previously had a threshold of RMB 500 per day. However, this has now been amended to the same amount but over the period of a month.
The previous amount would allow minors to spend up to RMB 15,000 over a 30 day period and could amount to enormous charges for QQ account holders.
The reminder system currently applies to games including Honour of Kings (王者荣耀), League of Legends (英雄联盟), CrossFire (穿越火线:枪战王者), QQ Speed Mobile (QQ飞车手游), Naruto Mobile (火影忍者手游), Miracle Nikki (奇迹暖暖), Dungeon Fighter Online (地下城与勇士). It said it expects to launch the feature on other games in the future.
Gaming addiction has been highlighted as a major problem in China as high profile figures, including those from the country’s top political advisory body. Officials and media have called out gaming companies, including Tencent, for enfeebling the younger generation. Tencent has often faced scrutiny for its perceived contributions to gaming addiction. It was criticized last year by the state-owned People’s Daily after the company announced playing time limits on Honor of Kings.
The government newspaper called the game “poison,” and said that it expected there to be regulations put in place to curb addiction to social games. China was the first country to declare gaming addiction a “mental disorder,” with parents taking controversial measures to rid their children of the addiction.
]]>Tencent Music is expected to submit an IPO filing to the United States Securities and Exchange Commission on July 6 as it begins its US listing.
According to an unnamed source, the listing is being underwritten by Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. The company is expected to be valued at between $29 billion to $31 billion.
Tencent Music runs QQ Music, Kugou, and Kuwo. According to figure from December 2017, Tencent Music has 700 million monthly active users (MAU), 17 million songs, and 12o million paying subscribers.
The company’s 2016 revenue reached nearly RMB 5 billion, with a net profit of close to RMB 600 million. A year later, its operating income reached RMB 9.4 billion and its net profit exceeded RMB 1.88 billion. These gains are expected to continue in the future, with an expected revenue of RMB 17 billion in 2018.
According to a 2017 report, the company’s three music apps were the most popular in China. Tencent’s competition includes Alibaba, NetEase, and Baidu Music, the latter merging with Taihe Music in 2015 and rebranding to Qianqian Music in 2018.
Due to increasing government crackdowns on companies in the music streaming industry which provide unlicensed music, firms in this space are forming copyright partnerships. In 2017, Tencent Music and Entertainment teamed with Ali Music Group on music copyrights. The company then reached a cross-licensing agreement with NetEase Music following copyright disputes. Tencent has also sought partnerships with international counterparts including Spotify.
]]>Big data has exploded over the past few years. It is expected that by 2020 every human will create the equivalent of 1.7 megabytes of data every second. More than 90% of all the data that exists has been generated since 2015.
The data comes from numerous sources: social media, financial transactions, governments, and sensors. With the rise of the internet of things (IoT), the amount of data collected is expected to increase exponentially. It is believed that by 2030 there will be more than 125 billion IoT devices in service, representing a 360% increase from 2017.
However, problems arise when data is collected from multiple sources. It becomes unstructured, messy, and disparate.
“I think this is a categorically important problem or challenge to AI,” Min Wanli, chief machine intelligence scientist at Alibaba Cloud, said at TechCrunch Hangzhou.”Anytime, if you get a new data source, you have to reconcile or do a data ‘massage’ in real time or either offline.”
While this may be easy for offline data, it becomes much harder when dealing with data in real-time. Min says that a basic approach is needed when dealing with this data. “This is not from the technology’s side; rather it is from the application side. And first, you’ve got to identify your use case scenario, your vertical application.”
Unstructured data is expected to make up 80% of the world’s 163 zettabytes by 2025. This data, which is not stored in a fixed record length format, cannot be read by machines. Examples include documents, social media information, pictures, and video. Because of the vast amounts of it, it provides enormous potential for training AI and in machine learning applications.
Despite the challenges it poses for artificial intelligence, the technology has also been applied to solving the exact problem it is facing. According to IBM, Watson “takes huge amounts of unstructured data, understands it, and uses that data to lay out hypotheses.”
Apart from the difficulties created by unstructured data, Min said that too much data could also be troublesome. “Try to identify the minimum sufficient data input,” he said. “Providing minimum sufficient data is productive and is beneficial.” He said that from Alibaba’s perspective, not being overburdened with data can then speed up their practices. He also said it aids companies using their services
“Their entire implementation process to them is beneficial because they have less burden, less pressure on their side,” said Min.
]]>China has never been a hotbed for operating system (OS) development. Nearly half of the country’s OS market share is controlled by Google’s Android, with another quarter belonging to Microsoft’s Windows.
That isn’t to say that it has not been a part of the process of creating an operating system. In 2001, researchers at the country’s National University of Defense Technology began developing an OS specifically designed for use by China’s military and other government departments.
Dubbed Kylin, the OS was first based on FreeBSD and later on Linux. In 2015, NeoKylin was launched, with the hope that it would replace Windows on the country’s computers. Other locally developed OSs include China Operating System, which was intended for use on mobile devices and set-top boxes.
Rokid co-founder Eric Wong says that while China has a strong pool of AI and machine learning talents, the same is not true for operating system development.
“There aren’t too many development talents in OS platforms [in China],” Wong said at TechCrunch Hangzhou. “In the US, there are lots of OS developers.”
Despite this, the country has seen some drastic improvements in its AI capabilities over the past ten years.
The company itself is looking to develop an AI operating system for its products and those of other companies. And given the excess of AI talent in the country, it may be a good place to start. “We are doing a turnkey or full-stack solution where we are going to provide a voice interactive solution, not only for our product but also opening it up to the whole industry,” he said.
“In the AI period, there are no AI OSs. Big companies have plans, [but] we can’t wait for the development,” he said.
In order to leverage China’s talents in the development of the AI OS, Wang says that standards are very important, adding that the company is building a community development platform.
“We really encourage individual developers to come to the R&D platform and hope to provide a standard software development kit (SDK) for everyone,” he said. “We are actually designing for the future and making future standards.”
The company is also looking to provide a range of AI-enabled products. It recently revealed a number of new pieces of hardware, including a portable smart speaker, AR glasses, and a voice-first AI chip.
The company previously told TechNode that it found developing AI products on multi-purpose chips was power consuming and costly, which is a definite disadvantage to the development of the technology.
]]>From cities to the countryside, from power plants to homes, we are quantifying every facet of our environment. We deploy hardware on farms to monitor environmental conditions, install smart meters in our homes to track energy usage, and stalk components in a supply chain to increase efficiency. The number of potential applications is mind-boggling.
While the figure is much debated, there are expected to be 125 billion devices connected to the internet by 2030, a 360% increase from 2017. In China, the market for these devices is expected to reach $121 billion by 2022. Additionally, the number one shipper of IoT cellular modules in 2017, which allow machines to “talk” to each other over a mobile network, was Shenzhen-based.
The Chinese government has already set out plans to deploy more than 600 million narrowband IoT (NB-IoT) devices—which require very little power and have extended ranges—in the next three years. These will eventually replace the existing network of 2G devices. The Chinese IoT market is enormous.
But the use of these devices comes with a caveat. As we measure and monitor the world around us, we too get drawn into the web. In 2016, a group of Chinese researchers found vulnerabilities in the Taiwanese-made Edimax smart plug, a device routinely used for home automation. The team was able to gain access to user credentials by exploiting cryptographic flaws.
In 2017, Xiongmai Technology, an IoT camera manufacturer from Hangzhou admitted its cameras had been exploited by the Mirai malware to form part of a botnet and launch a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack targeting websites including Twitter, PayPal, and Spotify. The assault was one of the worst in US history.
Also in 2017, cybersecurity firm Bitdefender found that over 175,000 cameras made by Shenzhen’s Neo Electronics could be remotely exploited. The company later recalled 10,000 cameras in the US. These are not isolated cases; numerous other Chinese IoT camera manufacturers have been called out for security flaws.
The explanation for the vast number of issues has less to do with technological limitations and more to do with economics: it’s more expensive to make a secure device.
“Securing the device is possible, so there are multiple things that the device manufacturers should do, but it will cost two or three times more,” said Rodrigo Brito, member of Nokia’s cybersecurity leadership team, during a panel discussion at Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Shanghai.
“I wouldn’t see it as a technology gap, I would see it as a money gap,” he said.
The affinity for creating unsecure, low-cost IoT devices has led to a spike in the total number of vulnerabilities globally. According to a report by the Chinese Cybersecurity Emergency Response Team (CN-CERT), the number of IoT exploits found by the organization increased by 120% in 2017, with 27,000 devices being targeted by malicious actors every day.
CN-CERT said in its report that it expects the threats to connected devices to intensify in 2018 due manufacturers’ lack of security capabilities and the absence of industry supervision. The organization believes this will cause significant harm to privacy, capital assets, and personal safety.
“The devices that are not on the markets [are] rushed to market with very poor security, privacy, and safety protection for consumers,” said Frédéric Donck, managing director of the Internet Society’s European Regional Bureau in a speech at MWC. “Security might be something that represents a cost. Well, industry doesn’t like that much. So, new devices, new vulnerabilities.”
With the expected proliferation of IoT networks in the next ten years comes major threats to the internet itself. These may not only arise from devices themselves but a lack of confidence created by their exploitation.
“The bottom line is users might lose trust in the internet,” said Donck. “That would be very detrimental. We’ve seen that in the past with many other big incidents. If users don’t trust the internet anymore, you have a big issue. They won’t buy; they won’t use those promising applications and services.”
Donck’s statement is obviously hyperbolic. Will IoT vulnerabilities lead to a mistrust of the internet? It’s unlikely. But he does highlight a danger for IoT companies: lack of security protections for users could result in diminishing revenue, especially in a world where privacy has collided with the public sphere.
Despite leaders of tech companies explicitly stating that Chinese users of online services don’t care about their online privacy, the data says otherwise. In an online poll on Weibo, 86% of respondents said their privacy shouldn’t be violated, and over 50% said they see the data breaches as a significant problem in China. Additionally, 70% of users of digital media in the country have opted out of technologies, sites, or services because they believed they didn’t have enough control over their data.
These concerns become ever more pressing when wearable technologies are exploited. Devices like these pose one of the most significant threats to privacy. And the livelihood of their users.
“Biometrics is a very interesting problem,” said Sri Chandrasekaran, member of the IEEE-Standards Association (IEEE-SA) during the panel. “The challenge with biometrics is once it’s hacked, then you lose your identity. You went from having a security problem into completely losing your identity in the digital space.”
What he says is true. When an email or social media account is compromised, you can change your password and other login credentials. The same isn’t true of biometric data. Once it has been exploited, there is no going back.
Ensuring the security of IoT devices requires a multipronged approach. All elements in an IoT service need to be secured, from networks to devices to software to service platforms. Every layer of the application needs to be hardened.
“The device must be protected or designed with security in mind,” said Brito. The concept of security by design is an approach to hardware and software development that seeks to create a system that is free from vulnerabilities as it can be. “I consider the basics would be secure connectivity, authentication—so digital certificates—physical security, and device management so that when flaws are found then the problems can be solved,” he said.
This approach ensures that countermeasures are proactive rather than reactive, and generally benefits everyone, even those who are looking to save money. The cost of re-architecting an IoT network is far higher than creating a secure system from the outset, says Chandrasekaran.
The industry has so far witnessed a failure of the market with manufacturers seeking to reduce their expenses at the cost of user security and privacy. This is where standards come in: “We need to solve the security issue up front, not afterward. So [you should] apply all these different standards and the government issues laws and regulations to promote cybersecurity,” Samuel Sinn, a partner at PwC’s Risk Assurance practice, said at MWC.
However, the problem won’t just be solved by regulators. Various stakeholders need to get together to discuss the system’s current issues. Chandrasekaran believes that policymakers may not be able to adequately understand complex technologies, and conversely, technologists may not understand the issues involved in setting standards and regulations.
Donck agrees: “We need many more people around the table to discuss security because as we see, there is an ecosystem that is impacting so many different actors that you need those actors to be around the table.”
With growing privacy and security concerns around the globe, diminishing confidence in unsecure systems, and more intense scrutiny from regulators, security should not come at a premium.
“It’s a non-functional feature. So I as a customer, I shouldn’t be paying for security,” said Chandrasekaran.
]]>Nine of the world’s twelve most shipped smartphone manufacturers are headquartered in China, according to semiconductor market research firm IC Insights.
The company recently updated its 2018 IC Market Drivers Report in which it documented the applications fueling demand for integrated circuits (ICs). According to the report, Apple and Samsung still dominate the market for high-end smartphones (over $200). The two companies combined shipped over 530 million smartphones in 2017, controlling 36% of the market share.
While these two companies controlled the high-end range, their shipments saw little growth. However, Huawei, OPPO, Vivo, and Xiaomi, coming in at third, fourth, fifth, and sixth on the list respectively, witnessed between a 10% and 73% increase in shipments.
The combined shipments by OPPO and Vivo, both owned by BKK Electronics, fell short of Apple’s shipments by just 2.7 million units. Chinese companies on the list shipped a total of 626 million smartphones in 2017, an 11% increase compared to 2016. They also controlled 42% of global smartphone shipments.
Nonetheless, Lenovo, ZTE, TCL, Gionee, and LeEco/Coolpad saw their shipments drop by up to a quarter.
Growth in shipments from Chinese manufacturers is being driven by the international market, with total shipments increasing by 47% in 2017, according to market research firm Newzoo. The company claims that India is a significant driving force behind the increasing demand, with the usage of Chinese-made devices rising by 225% between 2016 and 2017, and accounting for 37% of all smartphones in the country at the end of 2017.
While global shipments of Chinese smartphones are on the rise, local shipments are down. According to Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT) data, domestic shipments slumped by over 16% in the first-quarter of 2018 to 39 million handsets. Technology market research firm Canalys documented a similar trend, saying that eight of the county’s ten major manufacturers experienced declines in shipments. The firm attributed the decrease to rampant imitation resulting from competition in the market.
]]>China has issued its first blockchain-based tax invoice in the southern city of Guangzhou, as part of an effort to stamp out fraud and increase the ease of reimbursements.
The initiative was launched in Huangpu district of the Guangzhou Development Zone, with Guangzhou Gas Group Co. issuing the first tax invoice of its kind. The documents, known as fapiao (发票), are used by businesses and individuals alike for the purpose of tax deductions and reimbursements. However, the system is often exploited, and a black market for these official documents has emerged.
The Southern Daily reports that “Tax Chain” (税链, our translation) will provide an alternative in which data cannot be modified, and its safety can be guaranteed.
“Blockchain data can’t be tampered with, ensuring the authenticity and integrity of invoice data,” Xu Zhengjun, chairman of Foresee Technologies, the company that operates Tax Chain, is quoted as saying. He added that the distributed nature of blockchain would ensure data can never be lost.
Xu also mentioned the system would be able to keep taxpayers’ identities safe, minimize the risk of data breaches, and ensure personal data is not illegally used.
While tax invoice applications have become more convenient through the use of apps like WeChat and Alipay, this is the first time the country is combining the government-mandated invoices with the immutability of blockchain.
The government has been pushing the adoption and development of blockchain and its related applications. In April, a government-led venture capital fund focusing on blockchain was launched in Shenzhen, known as the Silicon Valley of hardware in China. One month prior, a research institution in the country’s central bank, announced the Blockchain Registry Open Platform (BROP) which is aimed at developing intellectual property rights.
In December 2016, it was included as a strategic technology in the country’s 13th Five-Year Plan. In line with this, officials have been working on a set of national standards, which will include requirements for interoperability, safety, and reliability.
]]>Search giant Baidu said in documents submitted to the US Securities and Exchange Commission that it is evaluating the possibility of issuing China Depositary Receipts (CDRs), our sister site is reporting (in Chinese).
In early June, Baidu reportedly selected Huatai Securities and CITIC Securities as sponsors for the issuance of CDRs. Should the move materialize, Baidu may become the first company to return A shares from the Nasdaq through the CDR process.
China’s depositary receipts are a way to bring foreign-listed Chinese companies back home by allowing those living domestically to invest in them. The China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) adopted a set of draft rules in early June. The regulations provide an “institutional foundation” for domestic companies issuing CDRs in the Chinese market.
However, Baidu has not been the only company to show interest in CDRs. Alibaba and Baidu have also entertained ideas about listing locally.
Most recently, Xiaomi showed its intent to issue CDRs. On June 8, the company completed its filing ahead of its Hong Kong IPO. However, the smartphone maker abruptly postponed its plans after the review process had been scheduled. At the time it said it would only issue CDRs after its initial public offering. In a final blow, it said that there is no timeframe in which the process would be completed.
The speed at which Xiaomi’s CDR application was accepted and scheduled for review—less than two weeks—highlights the government’s resolve in trading these companies domestically. Additionally, in April, biotech company WuXi AppTech’s request to relist in Shanghai was approved in just seven weeks. The rapid pace at which China hopes to list high profile companies may be a sign of competition between exchanges at home and abroad.
]]>Chinese internet giant Tencent has become a platinum member of the Linux Foundation.
The move will place Tencent Mobile Internet Group general manager Liu Xin on the Linux Foundation’s board of directors. Additionally, the company plans to contribute an open source microservices project called TARS and a name service project dubbed Tseer to the foundation. It will also contribute Angel, its open source AI project, to the foundation’s deep learning division.
According to the Linux Foundation, Tencent has been “using Linux exclusively for many years.” The organization also said the company was one of the first to make use of an open source controller (OpenDaylight Project’s SDN) at a large scale to manage data flow between its data centers. The company was also a founding member of the Open China SDN committee.
“We are honored to be a Platinum member of The Linux Foundation. Open source is core to Tencent’s technical strategy,” Liu said in a statement. “We look forward to strengthening our relationship with the international open source community and promoting innovation in cutting-edge technology.”
Tencent joins the ranks of fellow Chinese platinum member Huawei and international members IBM, Qualcomm, and Intel.
According to one study, Tencent ranks 12th out of the world’s tech companies regarding employees contributing to open source repositories on GitHub. Alibaba and Baidu rank 9th and 15th respectively. Alibaba’s cloud computing arm and Baidu are also both gold members of the Linux Foundation.
In May, Tencent unveiled China’s first open source Go-playing AI, making use of spare WeChat servers to train the program. Dubbed “PheonixGo,” the AI’s source code and training model can be run on a single GPU and its hosted on GitHub.
]]>WeChat now allows for real-time tax rebates at 77 airports in Europe and Asia. The service, dubbed We Tax Refund, enables travelers to quickly apply for tax refunds in the app while abroad or once they have returned home.
According to the company, the rebates through WeChat are available in South Korea, Germany, Italy, Greece, and Finland, among others. WeChat also claims that it will not impose any fees on the transactions.
The platform allows for applying for rebates in three ways:
Tencent recently announced that it was working with the Chinese government to provide a WeChat-based e-pass for travelers between Hong Kong and the mainland. The service will allow users to link their ID cards with WeChat to facilitate ease of travel between the two regions.
Chinese tourists made over 130 million trips overseas in 2017, with spending amounting to $115 billion. These numbers represent a 7% and 5% year-on-year respective increase. While just 6% of the county’s population hold passports, the total number of Chinese citizens traveling internationally is expected to rise by 200 million in the next two years.
]]>Updated 13:10, 21 June 2018: Qualcomm is now the sole foreign company on the list of cornerstone investors. The article and its headline have been amended to reflect this development.
Chinese smartphone manufacturer Xiaomi’s cornerstone investor list has been released ahead of its Hong Kong IPO. The roll contains only one foreign firm, highlighting a disparity between the views of foreign and local firms about the company’s valuation.
Investors on the list include US-based chipmaker Qualcomm, the asset management businesses of Bank of China, Agricultural Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, China Construction Bank, Bank of Communications, and China Everbright, as well as Poly Group and Shanghai Municipal Investment Group. The IPO is said to be worth between $65 billion and $80 billion.
The low number of foreign firms on the Xiaomi’s cornerstone investor list underscores a difference in opinion on how Xiaomi’s valuation should be calculated. Foreign investors believe the company’s financial results don’t support a high assessment, and that it should be valued at a price-earnings ratio between that of a hardware company and an internet company.
However, Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun and CFO Zhou Shouzi—who is said to have been appointed as senior vice president—believe the company should acquire a valuation of a hardware company plus an internet company and not a balance between the two.
Xiaomi filed for a Hong Kong IPO in early May with an expected valuation of $100 billion. However, this figure has been much debated and was later downgraded to between $65 billion and $70 billion, which would make it the city’s 12th biggest listing based on market capitalization.
Shortly after the IPO announcement, two Xiaomi co-founders resigned. In an internal letter, Lei noted that Zhou Guangping and Huang Jiangji would leave the company, explaining that the founders were choosing a new way of life for personal reasons. However, media reports stated the duo’s positions had long been on the shelf.
On June 19, the company announced it had postponed its plan to simultaneously list on Mainland China’s stock exchanges after it was the first to file a China Depositary Receipt (CDR) application. The company said it would wait until after its Hong Kong IPO.
]]>Taihe Group’s Baidu Music (百度音乐) has rebranded as Qianqian Music (千千音乐), launching a new logo and domain. However, functionality within the app and the on the website remains the same.
The move follows a 2015 merger between Baidu’s music service and Chinese music company Taihe Entertainment Group, in which the Chinese tech giant sought to spin off one of its brands for investment. The move also aimed to improve Baidu’s Music’s offerings by leveraging Taihe’s library of local and international content.
“Baidu Music has been upgraded to Qianqian Music, which is not only a simple brand upgrade but also an indispensable measure for us to fit in with the needs of emerging users.” Liu Xin, vice president of Taihe Music Group, is quoted as saying.
China’s music streaming industry is enormous. With a smartphone penetration rate of 92 devices for every 100 individuals, 86% of users listen to music on their mobile phones. This has created an increasingly competitive market for music streaming businesses, which is dominated by players including Kuguo Music and QQ Music.
The competition in the market has resulted in numerous license infringement lawsuits and counter-suits between QQ Music, NetEase Music, Alibaba’s Xiami Music, and Kuguo Music, and competitors in the market. The turbulence eventually led to the government enforcing music strict copyright regulations in 2015.
According to research firm iResearch, mobile music users made up 62.7% of total internet users at the end of 2017, with a vast majority of users reporting a preference for pop music.
]]>Editor’s note: This article was supported by Kujiale. We believe in transparency in our publishing and monetization model. Read more here.
“If you are a building a really good design tool, the tool is not important. The designer’s idea is more important,” said Wang Lei. “We want them to forget about the tool and focus on designing something.”
Wang sits on a chair in a busy exhibition hall. He nurses an iPad with both hands. A 3D model of the interior of a house fills its screen. “We are focussed on interior design,” he tells TechNode. “It is a big project in the concept of the building. It’s the last step, but it’s also really important.”
Wang is the vice president of COOHOM, the international arm of Chinese proptech company Kujiale (酷家乐). The company aims to provide designers with a cloud-based, interactive mixed reality platform for modeling inside spaces. The brands were born out of a need. Wang says that in many instances when homeowners employ contractors to decorate their new properties, “they don’t know what they are going to get.”
China has the highest rates of property ownership in the world. Since the country’s housing reforms in 1998, the market has experienced rapid development. Chinese banks extended RMB 1.9 trillion ($302 billion) in mortgages for new homes in the first-quarter of 2018, up over 11% year-on-year. This is, in part, driven by China’s rapid rates of urbanization. In 1990, just 26% of the country’s population lived in cities. This number swelled to 56% in 2015 and is expected to rise to over 60% by 2020.
Additionally, consulting firm McKinsey predicts that by 2022, 76% of these urban populations will be considered middle class, increasing national consumption from RMB 29 trillion in 2016 to RMB 56 trillion in 2027. And most importantly for interior designers, 91% of the country’s millennials plan to use their money to buy houses in the next four years.
“In China, the home is really important for everybody,” says Wang. This has created an enormous market for interior designers, and internet-based solutions have proved popular. Kujiale is hoping to replicate its success in China internationally under its COOHOM brand.
COOHOM believes that mobile devices are revolutionizing the process of shaping interior spaces, allowing for functionality that it is not available on a computer. Wang says that designers are utilizing mobile devices more frequently to create designs, in part due to their portability.
“In the old days, people printed the plot; you have to carry these things to the field,” he says. “With these devices, you don’t have to do that. It’s connected. It’s always connected to the cloud.”
By using cloud computing, designers have access to the projects they are focussing on wherever they have internet coverage, allowing them to work on projects inspiration strikes.
In Kujiale’s case, a library of 30 million projects exists on the company’s platform, accounting for 90% of all floorplans in China. These plans are obtained from both the government and designers. “This is the beauty of the internet. It’s actually crowdsourcing,” Wang says. “We are trying to figure out how we can get the same library in the United States and other places.”
In addition to storing data in the cloud, the processing power of remote computers can also be used. “We use a server to do the rendering,” says Wang. Rendering, the process of “taking a photo” of a virtual 3D environment, is used by architects and designers to create a computer-generated representation of what a building or interior will look like.
“It would take about one day to render one image on an iPad. For our system, it would take a couple of minutes to do an HD rendering. We have hundreds on servers in our rendering farm in order to render designs much faster,” Wang explains.
Augmented reality (AR) is nothing new. Despite the term being coined in 1990, the first instance of the technology came about in 1968. The technology now has countless applications. From gaming to medicine to design, revenue from AR hardware and software in China reached $249 million in 2016 and is expected to rise to $1.7 billion by 2021. The release of Apple’s ARKit and Google’s ARCore have in no small part helped to bring the technology to mobile devices, thereby driving penetration.
“We are thinking about AR in two ways,” says Wang. “The first thing: AR can be used as a measuring tool to help you to create a floor plan. You can use it as a ruler. The second thing: instead of just putting one piece of content on your floor, we think about designing in AR mode. So actually, we want to put the entire design onto the floor, and you can use your tablet to walk inside of your design project. You can walk inside the room in the real scale.”
He says that AR allows designers to see if a particular piece of furniture is a good fit for a space. The company works with manufacturers and designers to create 3D models of existing pieces of furniture that are on the market. These models are then imported into the system and manufacturers have the opportunity to open their product library to others on the platform. The company also encourages users to upload their 3D models.
In addition to AR, virtual reality (VR) provides a more lifelike opportunity for homeowners to view the work of designers in a virtual space. COOHOM uses the renderings it creates on its servers to afford homeowners the chance to walk through a virtual representation of their newly decorated home. “We want to provide you [with a situation where] what you see is what you get,” Wang explains. “In this case, we render 720-degree high-resolution images. You can go inside [in VR] and see the result before you implement the project.”
Wang says that despite being a tool for designers, these platforms are available for anyone to use. “We want to talk to designers because this is a designers tool,” but “as an individual person, if you want to DIY your home, why not?”
]]>The winners of CES Asia’s 2018 Startup Awards were announced in a ceremony on June 13. Nine companies were selected from a pool of fifty, representing numerous sectors within the tech industry.
The awards ceremony, presented by TechNode, were held at CES Asia’s Startup Park in Shanghai. Both the English and Chinese editorial teams were involved in reviewing the companies. TechNode staff engaged in three rounds of selection to reduce the number of finalists to nine.
Startups fell into numerous categories, including those working with artificial intelligence, robotics, healthcare, autonomous vehicles, AR/VR, IoT, and audiovisual technologies.
John Kelley, show director of CES Asia at the Consumer Technology Association (CTA) attended the event, saying the winners highlight some of the most important innovations in the consumer technology industry.
China’s Yitu Technology has announced the completion its $200 million Series C+, with investors including ICBC International, Gaocheng Venture Capital, and SPDB International, local media is reporting.
The company, which is one of China’s foremost AI startups, has developed technology that can accurately identify individuals from a database of one billion people in just one second. The company has partnered with local public security offices to provide facial recognition solutions. It also provides technologies that enable natural language processing (NLP) and artificial intelligence chips.
Yitu received angel investment in 2013. It then went on to complete its Gaorong Capital-led Series A in 2015. In 2016, it closed its YF Capital-led Series B, and in 2017 it received RMB380 million in Series C investment from Hillhouse Capital, Sequoia Capital, and YF Capital, among others.
The company has also set its sights on the international market. In January 2018, it opened its first overseas office in Singapore. It plans to increase its research capabilities in Southeast Asia and the rest of the world.
China has big ambitions for the domestic development of artificial intelligence technologies. A government plan calls for the country to be at the forefront of AI research by 2030. In the meantime, officials expect to catch up to the rest of the world’s AI capabilities by 2020. In April, China’s SenseTime became the world’s most valuable AI startup after securing $600 million at a valuation of $3 billion.
]]>Chinese game company Perfect World has partnered with Valve to launch a localized version of Steam, our sister site is reporting.
The partnership aims to provide Chinese gamers and developers with a new channel to access games and other entertainment products on Steam’s distribution platform. While an agreement between the companies has been signed, a launch date has yet to be announced.
The two companies have worked together since 2012, with Perfect World operating Counter-Strike: Global Offensive and Dota 2 in the region. Perfect World stated that the launch of Steam in China would not affect its existing Steam operations.
According to the agreement, Perfect World will establish, operate, and promote Steam in Mainland China. It will also be responsible for introducing Steam’s international gaming products to the market and localizing them. Additionally, the company will distribute locally-made games on the platform. Valve will provide software licensing and other technical support for the launch of the services in the country.
In establishing a localized version of Steam, Valve and Perfect World are looking to compete directly with incumbent players. Tencent and NetEase are two of the biggest companies in China’s gaming market. In September 2017, Tencent established WeGame, an online store for video games, which was seen as a move to compete with Steam directly.
Tencent is the biggest gaming company in the world. Last year its “Honour of Kings” was the most profitable game in the world. The company also owns Riot Games (League of Legends) and holds stakes in Activision Blizzard (World of Warcraft, Diablo, Starcraft, and Hearthstone), Supercell (Clash of Clans, Clash Royale), and Epic Games (Fortnite).
Alibaba has also shown its determination in competing with Tencent and NetEase. In April 2018, it signed a deal with Japanese company Hit Point to distribute the company’s popular Travel Frog in China. The company formally established its gaming division after it bought online game company EJoy, a firm founded by former NetEase COO Zhan Zhonghui.
]]>Following criticism by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT), the country’s three major mobile operators—China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—have announced changes to the ways they advertise their unlimited data packages.
According to reports, the MIIT held a meeting on June 8 to tackle the “hidden restrictions” on the use of unlimited data initiatives provided by the mobile operators. These companies were ordered to review the way they advertise these programs to the public.
The companies were criticized for failing to inform their users that once they reach a particular data usage threshold, their connection speeds would be throttled. While China Telecom said its practices are in line with international standards, the MIIT said these limitations should be explicitly stated.
The three operators released similarly-worded statements in response to the criticism. They said they would standardize their promotional material to include any limitations on unlimited data use, inform sales personnel to make these limitations clear to customers when selling the services, and send frequent reminders to notify customers about how much data they have used.
The MIIT also said that charges related to data roaming between provinces would end by July 1 and data would be 30% cheaper by the end of 2018. A three-year program to increase data transfer speeds while reducing costs have resulted in a 90% price reduction for broadband services and an 83.5% decrease in mobile data.
Usage of mobile data has increased by 154% in the past year, increasing to 3.4GB a month. Additionally, mobile data transfer speeds have increased to 19.12Mb/s, up 54.3%.
]]>Alibaba Cloud aims to increase efficiency and revenue for China’s farmers while improving food safety for consumers through the use of big data and artificial intelligence. It’s new platform, dubbed ET Agricultural Brain, was launched in Shanghai on May 7.
The system is already being used by Tequ Group, a large food and farming enterprise, on its pig farms in Sichuan province. Additionally, Haisheng Group and Guoqiang Modern Farming have implemented the platform on their fruit and vegetable farms.
Alibaba Cloud says that by using visual recognition, voice recognition, and environmental parameter monitoring, the technology will allow farmers to oversee animals on a farm in real time. The platform’s pig farming applications were revealed in February 2018 when Alibaba signed a cooperation agreement with Tequ and Dekon Group to train and develop the ET Brain (in Chinese).
Insights can be gained by monitoring the animal’s daily activity, growth indicators, and whether it is pregnant. Algorithms trained by the system can prescribe situation-specific courses of action. If an animal’s fat percentage is too high, activity plans can be automatically prescribed to cut down on fat and improve muscle mass.
“Originally, we had to rely on vets to look at [the animals], now we can do it all automatically,” Weng Degen, chairman of Tequ Group, said at the event. “It greatly reduces the disease rate and improves farming efficiency,” he said.
The company believes the platform will have a profound effect on animal husbandry, increasing a sow’s ability to produce newborns by three piglets per year, while decreasing unnatural death by 3%. Higher agricultural output through the use of AI can not only have an effect on revenue for farmers but also reduce prices and improve safety for consumers.
China’s bigger pig farms are beginning to produce a larger proportion of the country’s meat. Backyard farms accounted for 52% of pork production in 2017, dropping five percentage points in two years. Conversely, large farms produced 5.7% of pork in China, up 2.8% year-on-year.
The country is the biggest consumer, producer, and import of pork in the world. In 2016, agriculture made up 8.6% of its GDP.
]]>Bytedance’s news aggregation platform Jinri Toutiao has said Tencent abused its market position to ban and stigmatize Toutiao’s products on its platforms, NetEase Tech is reporting.
The company released a statement after tensions boiled over between the two firms last week. The company alleges that starting from March 2018 Tencent blocked content from Toutiao and Bytedance-owned short video platform Douyin on WeChat and QQ. It said this was done under the guise of supervision, security, and software bugs, among others. It also said Tencent sought to “stigmatize” its content.
Toutiao also said that Tencent-owned WeChat and QQ are the most prominent social platforms in China and the company should not seek to use its dominance to abuse competition in the market.
The remarks are the latest in a long-standing spat between the two companies. On June 1, Tencent announced it had filed a RMB 1 lawsuit against Bytedance Technology and an affiliated company in a Beijing court. The company is seeking compensation, mostly in the form of a public apology, for allegedly having their reputation damaged and for unfair competition. Tencent said numerous disparaging articles, videos, and statements had been circulated on Toutiao and Douyin targetting it and its executives.
Earlier that day, Tencent’s public relations director Zhang Jun accused Toutiao of misleading the public by wrongfully attributing and republishing an article that was critical of the company.
On June 2, Bytedance said it had filed a lawsuit against Tencent to the tune of RMB 90 million. The company is also seeking a public apology and an end to anti-competitive practices.
This is not the first time the two companies have taken legal action against one another. In July 2017, Bytedance lost a case against Tencent for copyright violations. Douyin later said it would take Tencent to court for defamation.
Prior to the legal action over the weekend, Tencent’s Pony Ma and Bytedance’s Zhang Yiming exchanged words publically on WeChat Moments. Zhang claimed that despite Tencent’s copyright infringements and blocking of Douyin’s video, the company’s growth would continue. Ma struck back saying Zhang’s comments amounted to defamation.
]]>ofo co-founder Yu Xin has denied allegations that it is laying off 50% of its employees and its chief operating officer (COO) is leaving the company, our sister site is reporting. Yu responded to the assertions on WeChat Moments, saying that headhunters would probably be disappointed as the company’s COO had not left.
The denial comes in the wake of reports claiming that the company is short of money and it would be closing its international business following the departure of COO Zhang Yanqi. However, Yu said that the company’s overseas business was profitable, citing its operation in Singapore as an example.
Nonetheless, additional reports claim the number of layoffs will be the highest in ofo’s history. Moreover, they claimed that senior vice president Nan Nan and public relations director Yang Xun had left the company.
ofo recently started selling advertising on its bicycles and in its apps, attempting to boost revenue amid increasing cash strain. Talk of the company’s cash problems has made news in the past few months. People close to the matter said that the company has paid off just 20% of its RMB 3 billion debt. ofo also mortgaged its bicycles for a RMB 1.77 billion loan from Alibaba.
In May, the company cut its orders on new bicycles to 80 thousand from 5 million, causing renewed speculation about its finances. The company responded by saying that some cities had placed a ban on the addition of new bikes. It said there would be more room for additional bikes in future as its existing fleet gets replaced.
]]>Short video platform Meipai (美拍) has been criticized by regulators for spreading vulgar content and negatively affecting the physical and mental health of young people. The Meitu-owned platform has been ordered to abide by local regulations and make relevant changes.
According to reports, the country’s internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), had imposed penalties on the platform for failing to abide by previous rectification orders. A CAC investigation found that the company had not properly managed video content and ignored public morals and opinions. The CAC said Meipai disseminated sexual content for the purpose of driving traffic.
China’s media regulator, the State Administration of Radio and Television (SART), and the Ministry of Culture and Tourism have proposed similar correction frameworks. A Meipai representative said the company would stop updating its live streaming channel for 15 days, halt updates to its “Popular” channel for 30 days, shut down its “Campus” channel, and conduct a review of the content on the platform. It also said it would develop a framework to protect young people.
In December 2017, Meipai announced a drive to increase self-censorship, remove underage users, and undergo a real name verification process for existing users.
2018 has seen an increase in government intervention and removal of “inappropriate” content from online platforms. In April, Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Kuaishou were ordered to better manage their content. Shortly after, Jinri Toutiao, Phoenix News, and NetEase News had their apps removed from numerous app stores in the country.
Toutiao was again targeted after it was ordered to permanently close its Neihan Duanzi (内涵段子 “implied jokes”) app for its vulgar content. Bytedance also temporarily removed the ability to live stream content in its Douyin app. The crackdown on short videos was followed by Tencent announcing it would remove the ability to play these videos within its messaging apps WeChat and QQ.
Social media platform Weibo also joined in the self-censorship drive. It announced plans to remove homosexually-themed content from its network. However, it later retracted the statement following public outcry.
]]>LeEco founder Jia Yueting has been banned from luxury air and rail travel. The restrictions include a complete prohibition on traveling on flights and limitations on rail travel for a year. The move follows the publication of Credit China’s list of individuals restricted from taking long-distance public transport.
The list contains the names of 169 individuals who have been prohibited from using China’s air and rail networks for failing to pay taxes, smoking on trains, and disrupting flights. Jia’s sister, Jia Yuefang, also appeared on the list. According to an investigation by the 21st Century Business Herald (in Chinese), Jia’s ID information is consistent with previously disclosed details.
On May 1, 2018, a framework entitled Opinions concerning Appropriately Limiting Specific Gravely Untrustworthy Persons from Riding Trains for a Certain Period, and Promoting the Construction of the Social Credit System was implemented. It bars passengers from using public transport from a range of reasons including refusing to buy train tickets when riding on the country’s rail network, failing to pay fines, failing to pay taxes, and engaging in fraudulent behavior.
Jia has found himself in financial trouble over the course of the past two years. LeEco’s cash situation quickly worsened in 2016 when the company tried to expand its operations outside of China’s borders. Following its financial trouble, Jia stepped down as chairman in July 2017, just one month after resigning from his position as company CEO. Things got worse when a Beijing court froze LeEco’s and Jia’s assets in August 2017.
In September 2017, the company rebranded in an attempt to distance itself from its founder. Three months later, Jia was added to a government blacklist for credit defaulters. He was called back to China in February 2018 to sort out the company’s mounting debt, and in May executives warned that the company would lose its position as a controlling shareholder in its TV division if Jia didn’t repay the money he owed the company.
Update June 2, 2018, 10:00: Included information relating to the type and duration of the ban.
]]>Chinese technology giant Tencent has filed a lawsuit worth RMB 1 against Bytedance and Microvision Technology for alleged unfair competition and damaging its reputation on the companies’ Douyin and Jinri Toutiao platforms.
The primary focus of the lawsuit seems to be a request for a public apology on the offending companies’ media platforms and suspended business cooperations with the two firms.
Tencent said numerous disparaging articles, videos, and statements had been disseminated on Douyin and Jinri Toutiao, thereby denigrating the company. It also said Douyin misleadingly stated to its users that Tencent had blocked the platform’s video links.
While it is true that the company barred Douyin’s videos, the ban was not limited to Bytedance’s video platform. Following a regulator-imposed crackdown on “inappropriate” content, Tencent blocked short videos from Douyin, Kauishou, Watermelon Video, and its own Weishi platform from being played within its messaging apps. The ban was lifted but posting videos from Douyin to WeChat is still a bit difficult.
Tencent also said that the platforms had belittled the company’s executives. Additionally, Zhang Jun, the company’s public relations director, said Jinri Toutiao had wrongfully attributed and republished an article that was critical of Tencent, thereby misleading readers.
The company said it believes Bytedance had deliberately attacked Tencent using its media platforms, and in doing so attempted to weaken the competitiveness of its rival. It said the company’s actions constitute slander and unfair competition.
The lawsuit is the most recent move in an ongoing feud between the two companies. Bytedance lost a court case against Tencent in July 2017 over copyright violations. It then announced it planned to take Tencent to court for a negative article that circulated on WeChat. Most recently, Bytedance’s Zhang Yiming and Tencent’s Pony Ma exchanged words on WeChat Moments. Zhang said that despite copyright infringements by Tencent and WeChat barring of Douyin videos, the company would continue to grow. Ma said Zhang’s comments amounted to defamation.
]]>Tencent’s public relations director Zhang Jun has criticized Bytedance’s news aggregation platform Jinri Toutiao for its information proliferation practices, according to local media.
Zhang said that the aggregator had attributed an article that was critical of Tencent and it’s gaming division to Xinhua News Agency when it was published by Xinhuanet.com. The report stated that online games harm young people and children and that Tencent seemed to be indifferent to their negative effects.
The article, first published by Xinhuanet.com, was pushed by Toutiao under its original headline. However, the article was later picked up by Baidu News and published under an alternative headline that included the name Xinhua News Agency. Toutiao then pushed the report posted by Baidu News, attributing it to Xinhua News Agency.
Zhang responded by saying that Xinhua News Agency had not reported on the effects of gaming, but on Tencent’s new data center in Guizhou.
Zhang did not call out Baidu News for the wrongful attribution and the spat highlights growing tensions between Tencent, Toutiao, and its parent company, Bytedance.
In May 2018, Tencent’s Pony Ma and Bytedance’s Zhang Yiming were found bickering on WeChat about Bytedance’s short video app Douyin (called TikTok overseas). Zhang said that even though WeChat had blocked Douyin’s short videos on its platform, it would not stop the company’s growth. The ban followed a crackdown on “inappropriate” content by China’s media regulator. Zhang added that Tencent had plagiarized Douyin with its short video app Weishi (微视). Ma responded by saying that that the accusations amounted to defamation.
Read more: Tencent and ByteDance founders argue on WeChat Moments about Douyin
Bytedance also lost a lawsuit against Tencent in July 2017 over copyright violations. On May 17, Bytedance announced it would take Tencent to court for defamation over an article berating Douyin for occupying children’s minds and publishing content that was inappropriate appeared on a public WeChat account.
Tencent responded by saying that WeChat’s official accounts have a system for filing complaints. The company said that once they are verified, they would be dealt with immediately. The company also said the article in question had already been deleted.
Update June 1, 2018, 18:15: Tencent released a statement saying that it has filed a lawsuit against Bytedance’s Jinri Toutiao and Douyin. It said Jinri Toutiao deliberately modified the headline and source of the article to damage Tencent’s reputation. The company is seeking RMB 1 in damages and a public apology on Bytedance’s media platforms. Tencent also claimed it had suspended its business cooperation with the companies.
]]>Second-hand mobile phones have become a target for illicit data brokers, who recover deleted user data and sell it on the black market for as little as RMB 10 ($1.56). Even phones that have been formatted to prevent incidents like this are not immune to exploitation.
According to reports, consumers sold over 30 million mobile phones in 2017, not including those marked for recycling. The number will only increase after the adoption of 5G networks, at which point the second-hand smartphone market will be flooded with unwanted 4G devices.
In an investigation conducted by AI Finance, reporters found that small businesses selling second-hand mobile phones were selling recovered address book information. One merchant initially charged RMB 100 for all the contacts on a mobile phone but quickly dropped her price to RMB 10.
Yang Bojun, the owner of a phone repair service, is quoted as saying that Android-based phones are more susceptible to data recovery. He said owners should format their devices twice before selling them.
China has seen a number of high profile data breaches in the past year. Personal data is sold for next to nothing. In April 2018, an investigation found that the personal data of users of food delivery apps was being sold for as little as RMB 0.10. Delivery drivers and restaurants were scraping data from delivery apps.
In June 2017, police arrested 22 individuals who worked at Apple-affiliated companies who were allegedly found to be selling iPhone users’ data. The going rate was as little as RMB10.
Officials imposed the country’s Cybersecurity Law in mid-2017 to serve as a roadmap for future legislation. Under the law, the collection of data needs to be legal, justified, and necessary. Additionally, a new set of standards for handling personal data came into effect on May 1, 2017. The standards extend the scope of what is deemed private, but compliance is not mandatory.
]]>Lifestyle and community e-commerce platform Xiaohongshu (小红书) has completed its Alibaba-led Series D worth $300 million, with a valuation of $3 billion, local media is reporting.
Both new and old investors took part in the round, which also includes Jinshajiang Venture Capital, Tencent Investment, Jiyuan Capital, Yuansheng Capital, Tiantu Investment, Zhenwen Fund, and K11 Zheng Zhigang. The company will use the funds to expand its team, improve its technology, and grow its user base.
Xiaohongshu was founded in 2013 and currently has more than 100 million users and 30 million monthly active users (MAU), most of whom were born in the 90s. It allows users to share short videos and photos focussing on beauty, fashion, food, travel, and entertainment.
The founder of the company broke the news to employees in an internal letter, saying the company had built a virtual city that belongs to its users.
For Alibaba, the investment marks an indirect push into the international market. Xiaohongshu also allows users to share cross-border shopping information. The e-commerce giant’s global revenue makes up 8% of its total. The company has been investing heavily in firms around Asia through funding in Pakistan, India, Indonesia, and Singapore.
Alibaba has made a number of investments in Lazada Group, South East Asia’s biggest e-commerce platform, increasing its stake in the company in April 2016, June 2017, and March 2018. The company also has stakes in Tokopedia in Indonesia and BigBasket in India.
]]>Digital technologies have shaped the modern world. They have become great equalizers capable of amplifying voices that previously went unheard. Unfortunately, in China and the rest of the world, they have so far been unable to tackle the gender inequality within the technology industry.
Less than a third of female students in China undertake technology-related degrees. Despite this low number, 90% of Chinese women involved in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) industries feel driven by a sense of meaning and purpose. Nonetheless, 30% of them are likely to leave their jobs within the first year.
The reasons are numerous. From lack of upward mobility within corporate structures to coworkers believing the false notion that men have a genetic advantage in technical fields as well as bias in performance evaluations. Women even report that behaving like men is beneficial to advancing their careers.
But breaking into the industry is also tricky. Discriminatory hiring practices came to light in early 2018 after it was revealed China’s tech companies have a preference for men. According to a report by Human Rights Watch, these companies often explicitly specify a proclivity or requirement for male applicants.
“When we look at gender equality…it’s a much bigger picture. It’s a lot more complex [than just pay],” Michelle Li, founder of Ruiwen She Power, said at a recent panel discussion in Hangzhou.
According to a 2017 report released by Chinese employment platform Zhaoping, 22% of women experienced extreme discrimination when seeking employment. This discrimination increases if women are better educated, and once employed, promotions are hard to come by.
Read more: Lies and statistics: How many of China’s women are actually in the tech sector?
“It’s about looking at the entire process, which means we have to start from the beginning,” Li said, highlighting the importance of hiring practices.
At 86th place out of 144 countries, China ranked behind Africa’s Lesotho and Malawi for economic participation and opportunity, according to the World Economic Forum’s 2017 Global Gender Gap report. Last year was the ninth time in a row the country’s overall position shifted negatively.
The gender gap is quite obviously illustrated by the difference in pay between male and female employees. Women in China make 22% less for doing similar work. While Mao famously said that “women hold up half the sky,” it would seem they don’t receive equal reimbursement for doing so.
“The goal ultimately is, of course, closing the gap,” Charlene Liu, co-founder of Ladies Who Tech, told TechNode. “So how to get there? One way is we want to inspire; inspire more women to be in STEM.”
Ladies Who Tech, founded by Liu and Jill Tang, aims to do just that. They officially launched the social enterprise on International Women’s Day in 2016 and relaunched in 2017. “We really want to try and encourage more Chinese ladies,” said Tang. “It’s a platform for everyone, but of course we are in China, so we will have a large amount of Chinese women.”
They are attempting to leverage the power of a community. Li also highlighted this idea in the panel discussion focusing on how technology can influence gender equality: “We have to be able to get into a group together. So for one woman to succeed, you will notice behind her will be many successful women that say she is successful.”
Despite women making up 40% of China’s STEM workforce, parity has yet to be reached. Both Liu and Tang believe that family plays an integral role in combating this. Liu said that when she decided to study a STEM-related subject, she didn’t receive encouragement from her family.
“It was a little bit discouraging,” she said. “Maybe it was my temperament, but I was just pissed. I said ‘I am going to prove you guys wrong,’ and I really mean guys, because it was my uncles who said that I wasn’t supposed to do this. I did, and it was tough, but I told myself I’m going to prove people wrong.”
When she started a job at Motorola in 1996, her boss was a woman. She said that even though there were very few women in management positions at the time, she didn’t think much of it. “Now, I think it was a big thing,” she comments.
The benefits of equality are not just social; they are also economic. According to the World Economic Forum, China could raise its GDP by $2.5 trillion from gender parity. Tang agrees: “If your company is diversified, your profit, your performance margins are 6% higher. It’s good for the shareholders. It’s a win-win situation,” she said.
While it is often reported that 55% of Chinese internet companies are founded by women, the numbers of women working in technology at technology companies is unclear. Tang believes that these companies may employ a lot of women, but the majority work in marketing or administration.
“For example, we had a woman from Taobao,” said Tang. “She runs a team of 30 people. There are only two women [in the team]. She’s the head, and runs a team of mostly men.”
Women account for just 9.4% of board members on publicly traded companies in China. However, despite the difficulties involved in climbing the corporate ladder, there is an increasing number of women who hold senior positions in China’s big tech companies. Female leaders include Ant Financial’s Peng Lei, Didi’s Jean Liu, VIPKid’s Mi Wenjuan, Bytedance’s Liu Zhen, Ctrip’s Sun Jie, Baidu’s Ma Dongmin. Additionally, Len’s Technology’s Zhou Qunfei is the richest self-made woman in the world.
Women at the top of a company shouldn’t be taken as an indication of female representation at the companies as a whole. But Liu and Tang believe they can influence decision-making to inspire women and create an equal environment.
“You need to be a role model. Then they can use their resources and influence to make it happen, Instead of going from the bottom up, at least when the companies put those women in those positions, they can do something,” said Tang.
Both Liu and Tang are aware that inspiration is not a cure-all for the industry’s gender parity woes. They hope to tackle the problems with the help of companies and governments and are placing their bets on the high-powered women within the tech industry.
“It doesn’t matter if it takes 100 years or 1000 years; if you don’t start you’re never going to close the gap,” said Tang. “Another reason we want to get corporates and governments on board is that we want to make an impact, but if there aren’t any jobs [for women in STEM], it’s not encouraging.”
]]>Chinese technology companies have witnessed amazing growth in the past half decade. Of the world’s top 20 internet firms, nine originate from China, even though just two went public prior to mid-2013. Tencent’s market value has increased by a factor of seven in the past five years Alibaba, which only IPOed in 2014, is now the country’s most valuable company.
The meteoric growth of China’s internet firms can be partly attributed to the number of people accessing the internet. China has an online community that is more than twice the size of the total population of the US and exceeds the entire populace of Europe.
These insights form part of famed venture capitalist Mary Meeker’s 2018 Internet Trends Report. The document contains everything from global e-commerce trends to internet policy, and more importantly, China’s rising influence in internet-related markets.
The explosive growth of digital data in China is providing the opportunity for the country to increase its artificial intelligence capabilities rapidly. China did not enter any international AI challenges until it 2011, at which point it placed 11th in the Large Scale Visual Recognition Challenge. However, it has advances hastily in the past few years. In Stanford’s ongoing Question Answering Dataset, Chinese organizations have dominated the top five places.
While the US is currently ahead in the race to advance AI technologies, China is focussed on gaining ground. The Chinese government hopes to be the at the forefront of development by 2030. The most valuable AI unicorn in the world, SenseTime, calls China its home.
Numerous AI research centers have been launched this year in Beijing. In February, city officials launched an international research center led by CEO of Sinovation Ventures, Kai-Fu Lee. Four months later, in May, Qualcomm opened an AI department dubbed The Qualcomm AI lab.
China’s economy is increasingly driven by domestic consumption, representing a 62% contribution to GDP growth, compared to 35% in 2003. Internet-based consumerism is propelling this trend with the proliferation of e-commerce.
Online-to-offline (O2O) are changing the face of retail in China. Numerous outlets are beginning to provide both online shopping capabilities and brick-and-mortar stores. Alibaba’s Hema has shown that physical stores with online capabilities can dramatically increase its number of transactions. The combination of daily online and offline purchases have enabled the company to facilitate twice as many sales as its competitors.
Unlike countries like the US and UK, which transitioned from computers to mobile devices, China has remained a mobile-first economy. As such, the country’s mobile data consumption to drive these services increased by 170% year-on-year.
Local tech companies are also spreading their services overseas. While Alibaba’s non-China revenue makes up just 8% of its total, it has seen over 65% year-on-year revenue growth in its international operations. The company has been investing heavily in the Asian market, with several investments in Pakistan, India, Indonesia, and Singapore.
Alibaba’s Alipay still commands the mobile payments sector. The company controls 54% of the market while WeChat Pay holds 38%. The country’s total mobile payment volume reached nearly $16 trillion in 2017.
The prevalence of mobile payment platforms is also allowing for growth in the car and bicycle rental sectors. The country is responsible for 68% of global trips on these rental platforms. Bike rental companies have a presence in most of the country’s major cities. However, due to the saturation of the market (and city streets), the government has been cracking down on the continued deployment of bicycles to selected cities around the country.
In 2013, the country spent 60% of its daily entertainment time on social media and 13% on video platforms. As of March 2018, video services have seen a dramatic increase in time spent on their platforms, up nearly 70%.
Short-form videos are driving this upward trend. Users of Douyin and Kuaishou spend an average of 52 minutes a day on these platforms. Additionally, online video content budget exceeded that of China’s TV networks for the first time in 2017. The increased budget is enabling platforms like iQiyi, Tencent Video, and Youku to produce original content and license exclusive films and TV series on their platforms.
Chinese gamers spent most of their time on team-based multiplayer games, including Honor of Kings and PUBG Mobile. The country is also home to the biggest computer game company in the world. Revenue from computer games reached almost $30 billion, the highest in the world.
Tencent’s recently published financial results are a testament to this. The company reported a 26% increase in gaming revenue in May.
]]>Internet-based financial services make up the biggest category of Chinese unicorns, with entertainment services coming in second, according to a China Internet Watch (CIW) whitepaper.
Over 15% of all unicorns fall within the category “Internet Finance.” Seven of China’s top 20 unicorns provide financial services. These include Ant Financial, OneConnect, JD Finance, and WeBank.
In line with the number of unicorns providing financial services on the internet, 70% of mobile internet users make use of online payment systems. These payments totaled RMB 55 trillion in 2017 and are expected to increase to RMB 90 trillion by 2019. Additionally, almost 17% of internet users made use of financial planning services in 2017, a 3.2 percentage point increase compared to 2016.
The second most populated category is entertainment (11.7%), followed by automotive (10.4%), intelligent hardware (6.5%), online medical care (3.9%), and artificial intelligence (3.4%).
Read more: Study of 151 Chinese unicorns shows Beijing #1 city for startups
While artificial intelligence unicorns aren’t as numerous as those in other categories, China hopes to be a world leader in AI technology by 2030. Chinese AI and facial recognition company SenseTime recently became the world’s most valuable AI startup. The company was valued at $3 billion after it raised $600 million from Alibaba and other investors.
The whitepaper also mentioned the geographical distribution of unicorns across China. 41.6% are based in Beijing while 23.4% are located in Shanghai. 35% of all startups come from other cities in China.
China is home to an ever-growing number of unicorns. In March 2018, China’s Ministry of Technology said that the total value of Chinese unicorns exceeded $628 billion. It also said online finance giant Ant Financial was the most valuable unicorn in the country. The company was followed by Didi Chuxing and Xiaomi.
]]>WeChat’s closed beta update for its Android app has shown what could possibly be in store for users of the platform in the not-too-distant future.
The update of Android’s 6.6.7 beta version displays an overhauled user interface of Moments, Official Accounts, and chat windows. Most changes come in the form of redone status bars. Traditionally, these bars have been a solid gray, but have now been made transparent.
The same changes can be seen in the QR code scanning interface, in which a thin transparent bar has replaced the broad, solid one in previous versions.
But it’s not only aesthetic features that have changed. There have been some changes in functionality, specifically within chat windows. Developers have included the option to find recently used emojis, allowing users to quickly discover those that they use regularly. However, testers noticed that this feature only applies to emojis found within WeChat and not on other keyboards.
In the past, the double-tap feature was reserved for enlarging messages for a better view. The update now allows users to forward messages and set reminders while in this view.
WeChat’s dominance in China’s messaging market drove nearly $33 billion of information consumption in 2017, up 30% since 2014. The platform accounts for over 30% of China’s total data traffic. The app is responsible for RMB 191 billion in data consumption, 2.2 times higher than in 2014.
]]>Beijing has begun issuing electronic health cards to residents through WeChat in a pilot program facilitated by Tencent and Sinosoft Technology. Currently, patients at Peking University Hospital and Beijing Friendship Hospital can benefit from the service.
According to reports (in Chinese), the digital cards are part of a broader plan to improve healthcare services by 2030. Their implementation comes as part of a move to standardize patient information. The pilot hopes to explore possible applications of the virtual card in the Beijing, Tianjin, and Hebei urban areas, with plans to eventually integrate patient information from the three regions.
The virtual health card is currently available through Peking University Hospital’s official WeChat account. Beijing Friendship University is presently unable to issue cards as it is in the process of debugging its card-issuing platform.
The digitization of government-issued cards in a popular trend in China. Officials hope not only to increase convenience but also improve the integrity of personal data. In April 2018, the government in Jiangxi province issued the first batch of ID chips for smartphone users. The smart chips, dubbed SIMeID, attach to the phone’s SIM card and can store sensitive identifying information for safer verification over the internet.
Both Tencent and Alibaba have also trialed digitized versions of China’s ubiquitous ID cards. Alibaba is currently trialing its Alipay-based digital IDs in Hangzhou and Quzhou in Zhejiang province, and Fuzhou in Fujian province. The virtual IDs allow their users to book train tickets and check into hotels but are only accepted by local authorities.
Tencent began issuing ID cards though WeChat in December 2017. The cards were first provided in the southern city of Guangzhou.
]]>Baidu Chief Operating Officer (COO) Lu Qi has resigned, and will no longer fill his current position after July 2018.
The company announced that Lu would continue to serve as vice-chairman of its board of directors. Lu said that he would no longer be able to work full-time in Beijing due to personal and family reasons. He said he is planning to spend more time with his family in the US.
“For my next steps, I plan to work in research and investment areas, to help advance our shared mission to make a complex world simpler through technology,” he said in a statement.
Lu was appointed to his position at Baidu in January 2017. Baidu CEO Robin Li said that Lu’s contributions to the company had allowed him to focus on the company’s strategic course. Prior to joining the company, he worked at Microsoft and Yahoo.
While Lu is leaving the company, Baidu announced that Wang Haifeng had been promoted to senior vice president and general manager of Baidu’s AI Group (AIG). Wang has been with Baidu for eight years and became a vice-president in 2013. He will oversee the company’s efforts in machine learning, big data, computer vision, natural language processing, speech technology, knowledge graph, robotics and augmented reality.
]]>Chinese cloud-based acceleration company Xunlei has announced the launch of two new products to foster the development of a blockchain ecosystem, allowing companies to transition to the cloud and manage decentralized apps (dApps).
The NASDAQ-listed company launched StellarCloud and ThunderChain Open Platform in Beijing on May 16, 2018.
Stellarcloud marks an expansion from content delivery network services to infrastructure as a service (IaaS) for the company. Xunlei allows users of their blockchain-based OneThing Cloud to share idle computing resources in exchange for LinkToken. Users can trade this for products and services that companies develop on ThunderChain or StellarCloud. Enterprise users can exchange LinkToken for idle computing power shared by users.
ThunderChain allows companies to build and manage Dapps that can process 1 million transactions a second.
The company says its platform will create a Blockchain 3.0 ecosystem involving millions of users. “Incentive and trust are two main issues facing not only shared computing, but also every sharing economy model in today’s digital age,” Xunlei CEO, Chen Lei, said in a statement. “The emergence of blockchain technology – featuring immutability, openness, and fairness – provides efficient solutions to some of the pressing problems we encounter today.”
In October 2017, the company announced its first blockchain-based product, hoping to move from being a traditional internet company to one that is progressive in its exploration of new technologies. The launch came amid a cryptocurrency ban in China, but Xunlei said that the OnceCoin token which was introduced at the time was not a currency, adding that it couldn’t be traded for cash.
Initially known for file sharing and downloading services, Xunlei began moving towards cloud computing in 2014. On May 15, the company’s share price dropped by 7% after announcing its 2018 Q1 results. Despite reporting a 118% year-on-year increase in revenue, it was down 4.4% from last quarter. Revenue from cloud computing saw a quarterly drop of 7%.
This article was updated on May 18, 2018, to correct the statement that Xunlei launched its StellarCloud and ThunderChain Open Platform on May 16, 2018. The two products were launched on May 17, 2018.
]]>Shenzhen’s local government has said Didi’s recent illegal deployments of Didi Bike (青桔单车) and Street Rabbit E-bike (our translation, 街兔电单车) will be marked on the company’s credit score (诚信记录 chéngxìnjìlù), and related departments will follow up based on the city’s management policies.
Since May 15, nearly 9,000 Didi Bikes and Street Rabbit E-bikes had been seized, according to local media (in Chinese).
In March 2018, Didi submitted a delivery plan to the local government, promising to strictly follow local regulations, adding that if it violated its commitments, it would voluntarily withdraw from Shenzhen.
According to reports, Didi continued to illegally launch its bicycles in Futian, Nanshan, Luohu, Bao’an, Longgang, and Longhua districts. Between March 17 and April 1, over 7,000 Didi Bikes were seized. The government then removed an additional 600 Didi Bikes and 994 Street Rabbit E-bikes between May 5 and May 15.
In March, Didi Bike’s operations were suspended for a day in Shenzhen after the government claimed the company had disobeyed local laws.
In its “Implementation Plan for Shenzhen Internet Rental Bicycle Regulatory Management and Renovation Action Plan” (our translation, 深圳市互联网租赁自行车规范管理整治行动实施方案), Shenzhen’s transport commission has prohibited companies from adding more bicycles to the city’s streets since August 2017.
Didi Bike launched in January after it began replacing Bluegogo bikes in Chengdu, also announcing launches in Beijing and Shenzhen. It later expanded to Dongguan, Foshan, Nanchang, and Hefei.
This is not the first time the company has run into trouble in Shenzhen. Transportation authorities in the city, as well as in Guangzhou, urged to the company to sort Bluegogo’s deposit woes and operation issues before continuing operations.
Didi had not provided a comment at the time of publishing.
]]>Over 45 Chinese tech companies have announced their intentions to refinance, showing that already listed companies are seeking ways to raise additional capital in order to drive innovation.
Qihoo 360 (三六零) and iFlytek (头科大讯飞) announced plans (in Chinese) to raise RMB 10.8 billion and RMB 3.6 billion respectively. The funds will be used for developing artificial intelligence technologies.
Over 90 companies have issued plans to refinance since the beginning of the year, half of which are tech companies. Both the number of companies and the scale of the financing have seen rapid year-on-year growth.
Tech companies are expected to raise a total of more than RMB 60 billion. Most companies are seeking to raise between RMB 1 billion and RMB 2 billion while only Qihoo 360 and ZTE are seeking more than RMB 10 billion.
An investment banker told local media that high-tech companies focussing on the internet, artificial intelligence, and biopharmaceuticals are set to drive economic development in China.
The plans show that it is not only IPOs that help tech companies drive innovation.
This year, there have been a number of high profile IPOs. In early May Xiaomi filed for a Hong Kong IPO, hoping to raise $10 billion with a valuation of $100 billion. However, that number has been questioned. On-demand video streaming platform iQiyi went public in March. In its latest financial results, the company said it expected to receive $2.36 billion in net proceeds from the IPO.
Other companies which have gone public or announced their intentions to do so include gaming video streaming platform Huya, online healthcare firm We Doctor, online retailer Meilishu, and cryptocurrency mining equipment manufacturer Canaan Creative.
]]>In early 2018, Chinese artist Deng Yufeng purchased and publically displayed the personal information of over 340,000 individuals. Entitled “Secrets,” the exhibit intended to highlight the ease with which personal information could be bought and sold. Two days after opening, the exhibition was shut down by local police, and Deng was placed under investigation.
Deng’s exhibit reveals how China’s illegal data market is flourishing despite increasingly strict regulation. The types of information illicit data brokers can collect is alarming. And, in China, despite the intrinsic value of data, it’s dirt cheap.
Malicious actors can buy mobile phone location and movement data, credit information, academic records, and phone records for as little as $0.01. Numerous high profile, low-cost data theft cases have made headlines in the past year. From Apple employees stealing iPhone user data and restaurant owners siphoning off customer information from food delivery apps to hackers taking advantage of mobile network vulnerabilities, personal data is chronically being targeted.
While reported data breaches in China are less frequent than in other countries, the median number of records involved is over 8000 times higher. In 2017, the average US data breach contained 1,458 records. That number exceeded 11 million in China. Furthermore, data leaks affected over 80% of netizens in 2017, according to the Internet Society of China.
The number of data theft cases come as no surprise. China is home to the world’s largest population of internet users. Over 770 million people in the country use the web, more than the entire population of Europe, and twice that of the United States.
“This is a market failure if you ask me. The market is not likely going to solve this,” Lokman Tsui, assistant professor of journalism at the Chinese University of Hong (CUHK), told TechNode.
“Companies collect data because it’s profitable, governments collect it because it gives them power,” he said. Nascent data protection laws are yet to have a significant effect.
The ease of access to illegally-obtained information comes with an increase in awareness, in part, due to high profile data breaches and influential figures engaging on the topic. In January 2018, Li Shufu, chairperson of Geely Holdings said that Tencent CEO Pony Ma “is watching us through WeChat every day.” The company quickly denied the accusations, saying it doesn’t keep users’ chat records. However, the Chinese government has demonstrated otherwise. Just one month later, Baidu CEO Robin Li postulated that Chinese internet users don’t care much for privacy. “If they can trade privacy for convenience, for security, for efficiency; in a lot of cases, they are willing to do that,” he said, causing outrage on social media.
Two months earlier, the company had been taken to court by the Jiangsu Consumer Protection Committee for illegally collecting user data. According to the group, two of Baidu’s apps gathered personal information without a user’s consent. Authorities also censured Ant Financial’s Alipay for privacy violations: automatically enrolling users in its Sesame Credit program. The company apologized after being summoned by Chinese regulators.
Despite Robin Li’s comments, Chinese internet users are aware of the value of their data. Sina Finance conducted a poll of over 10,000 Weibo users to gauge whether they value their online data. 86% responded by saying their privacy should not be violated, and over 50% see data breaches as a severe problem. In its 2017 China Social Media Impact report, market research firm Kantar found that 43% of respondents were concerned about their privacy and the integrity of their information online.
Even older generations are more conscious of the value of their data, mainly because of the persistence of telephone marketers. According to a 2017 study, Chinese citizens view phone numbers as the second most important piece of private data after ID numbers. IP addresses, internet records, friendship dynamics, ages, and real names are also included in the list.
“They say people don’t care about privacy. They say, ‘look at all the data they give away,’” said Tsui. “But I don’t think that’s fair. Companies and governments are so inclined to make people give up their data. They have become victims in that sense, I would say.”
As awareness grows, internet users look to big tech companies to protect the integrity of their online personas. But some of these companies are falling short.
Chinese tech giants Baidu and Tencent rank far below their Western counterparts concerning privacy. The companies scored 17% and 23% respectively in a recent study documenting the governance and privacy practices of major telecommunication and internet companies around the world. The survey found that both companies do not make use of adequate encryption, do not disclose how they handle data breaches and are opaque on how they collect from and and provide data to third parties.
In early 2016, The Citizen Lab at the University of Toronto found that desktop and mobile browsers made by both companies transmitted personally identifiable information without encryption, or in a form that is readily decryptable. According to researchers, both QQ Browser and Baidu Browser were easy to exploit. A later investigation found the problems to be partially resolved.
A Baidu spokesperson said the company had recently conducted a security screening process of its entire product line, adding that it equates guarding users’ data to guarding their trust.
On June 1, 2017, the Network Security Law, known more commonly as the Cybersecurity Law, came into effect. The oft-discussed legislation serves as a roadmap for the rules that will govern China’s internet in the years to come.
“Its main focus is on personal information and privacy of citizens in China,” Jared T. Nelson, data protection lawyer at MWE China Law Offices, a Chinese law firm in a strategic alliance with global law firm McDermott Will & Emery, told TechNode.
The law functions as a table of contents, which makes it general, or viewed more negatively, vague enough to cover any nascent technologies, including artificial intelligence.
The law states that companies wishing to collect data must do so inline with a set of general principles. Collection needs to be legal, justified, and necessary.
“Justification and necessity mean that if you are a company that sells eyeglasses and you have a customer relationship management system and rewards program, you can collect personal information about the customers to understand what they need and what they like,” said Nelson. “But you couldn’t, for example, collect how fast they drive their car or other things that are not necessary for the services that are being provided.”
A new set of standards for the handling of personal data came into effect on May 1. The new regulations specify that data collection needs to be minimal, retention needs to be short, and usage needs to be kept to a minimum, but do not require compliance.
Despite this, an under-reported law also aims to protect user privacy. Legislators amended China’s Criminal Law in 2015 to expand privacy protections. It now has a much more profound effect on data protection than its recently-passed counterpart. The bill initially only applied to the collection of data by government entities, but currently concerns anyone buying and selling data illegally.
In a high profile data privacy-related case, corporate investigators Peter Humphrey and his wife Yu Yingzeng were prosecuted under China’s Criminal Law. The couple allegedly obtained 256 pieces of information on Chinese citizens while employed by pharmaceutical giant GSK to scrutinize how someone had managed to film explicit videos of the company’s head of China operations and his Chinese girlfriend.
“That specific law has been enforced more frequently and in a more severe way than any of the other privacy rules that are on the books,” Nelson said.
Despite the existence of these protections, Tsui says the law on paper is different to the law in practice. And more importantly, users of online services have no say in what sorts of information are deemed personal.
“You have the fox guarding the chicken coop. You recognize that that is problematic, so you have a law protecting chickens. But the problem is the fox gets to decide which are chickens and which are not,” he said.
Nelson also believes that the classification of personally identifiable information is becoming increasingly more important.
“There is a lot of different information that you would never think that would be able to identify a person. But if you combine it, and especially if you have a computer combine it, the computer can see connections in ways that you or I couldn’t. [The connected data] could become personal information,” he said.
Robin Li highlighted this point just before making his controversial comments about China’s relationship with privacy: “When you are able to join different sets of data, the power becomes much more, it’s exponential growth.” The concept is known as the mosaic theory, and privacy laws in the country are yet to address it fully.
But it’s not only legal frameworks that can improve privacy. Technology and awareness can be enhanced. Tsui believes there should be fewer technological barriers to taking back privacy. “It is possible to have privacy. But it does require you to have enough knowledge. It’s not a reasonable expectation to have of everybody, just to secure something basic as privacy,” he said.
“Privacy is not a luxury item; it’s a human right or a basic right.”
]]>On-demand video streaming platform iQiyi (爱奇艺) has inked an exclusive three-year deal with American independent film production company FilmNation, granting it exclusive rights to all of FilmNation’s content in mainland China.
Our sister site reported that the signing of the agreement is the first time FilmNation has reached such a deal with a Chinese company.
The American firm has produced numerous big-name films including Arrival and The Big Sick.
This is not the first time iQiyi has signed a cooperation agreement with an international production company. It has previously worked with Sony, Fox, Disney, and Netflix.
In one of the most anticipated IPOs in 2018, the Nasdaq-listed company went public in March after filing for an offering size of $1.5 billion. In it’s latest financial results, iQiyi said it expected to raise $2.36 billion in net proceeds from its IPO.
In April, the company reported a 57% increase in revenue, driven by membership services and advertising. iQiyi attributed the growth to the release of original content and initiatives during Chinese New Year. In the last three months of 2017, the company had 421.3 million monthly active users and 126 million active daily mobile users.
]]>Investment bank and financial services company Morgan Stanely has increased Alibaba Cloud’s (阿里云) valuation from $39 billion to $68 billion. It said it expects the cloud computing company’s revenue to reach $28.5 billion in 2024.
According to reports, the company is the third biggest cloud solutions provider globally, falling just behind Amazon and Microsoft. However, at home, it commands 47.5% of the market.
The company’s financial results have been driving Wall Street’s optimism. Alibaba Cloud reported revenue of RMB 13.39 billion for FY2018, exceeding analysts’ expectations. Morgan Stanley has set the company’s expected 2024 revenue to $28.5 billion.
In a recent earnings conference call, executives said the company has its sights on the international market, hoping to challenge Amazon and Microsoft. In March, it opened its first data center in Indonesia.
The company is also looking to provide innovative computing solutions. In 2017, it launched 316 products and features, 60 of which were focussed on high-value fields, including artificial intelligence.
The company also piloted its smart city project in Hangzhou in 2017. Dubbed City Brain, it aimed to leverage its AI, deep learning and data analytics capabilities to perform real-time traffic prediction. It later launched its Malaysian City Brain initiative in January 2018.
Alibaba Cloud is also banking heavily on the internet of things (IoT). At the 2018 Cloud Computing Conference in Shenzhen, the company said it aspired to connect 10 billion devices by 2023. These include both devices in homes and connected cars.
Correction: The article originally indicated Alibaba Cloud reported a 2018 Q1 revenue of RMB 13.39 billion. This was later changed to a revenue of RMB 13.39 billion for FY2018.
]]>Bike rental company Mobike has announced complimentary rides and deposit-free use of its bicycle network in Anhui province’s capital of Hefei, local media is reporting.
Unlike other bike rental platforms, users would not need to use Sesame Credit to sign up or use the bikes without paying a deposit. Existing users in the city who have already paid a deposit can be refunded within the app.
Hefei is the first city in China to benefit from the new system but its not clear if or when it will be rolled out to the rest of the country.
Deposits create substantial cash flows for bike rental companies. Mobike had 4.21 million weekly active users in January, resulting in an accumulation of RMB 1.26 billion. While they are supposed to be held as collateral, deposits have been a contentious issue in the bike sharing industry. Numerous companies, including Bluegogo, highlighted the danger of paying deposits when these platforms fail. Before being partly taken over by Didi, Bluegogo Vice-CEO Hu Yufei admitted that the deposits had formed part of the company’s operating budget.
Coolqi also ignited fear shortly going under. In an announcement, it said that it would no longer refund deposits through WeChat, and required users to visit an office in Chengdu, Sichuan to get their money back. The news caused the government to step in. In a meeting between transport representatives from 17 provinces in November 2017, officials got together to discuss how to handle the deposit and refund system better.
Mobike made global news in April following its acquisition by Meituan. The company then announced a reshuffle in upper-management. Mobike CEO and co-founder Davis Wang stepped down from his position, while fellow co-founder Hu Weiwei took over the top spot.
]]>China has begun establishing national standards for blockchain technology, hoping to complete the process by the end of 2019.
While cryptocurrencies and initial coin offerings (ICOs) are prohibited in China, both regional and national governments have shown increasing support for the technology behind these platforms. Chinese authorities are looking at implementing top-level, or “top down,” standards to compete in the global market.
According to reports, the plan for the standards has been published, and a committee to handle their development will be set up.
The standards will include requirements for interoperability, safety, and reliability, according to Li Ming, director of the Blockchain Research Office of the Electronic Industry Standards Research Institute of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.
The government believes the technology can lead a new round of technological innovation and new industry development. However, with the standards, the authorities hope to mitigate risk associated with blockchain applications. According to Chinese researchers, blockchain technologies caused losses of $2.86 billion between 2011 and 2018. They said 2018 alone accounted for $1.9 billion of this total.
In March, China’s national government set up the Blockchain Registry Open Platform (BROP) through the country’s central bank. It aims to develop intellectual property rights on the blockchain.
Numerous local governments around the country are also pushing the development of the technology. In April, Shenzhen announced its first blockchain venture capital fund. The initiative is led by Shenzhen Angel Capital Guiding Fund. Hangzhou has been looking at its development after setting up a Blockchain Industrial Park.
Additionally, the technology was high on the agenda at Guangxi Autonomous Region’s annual “Two Sessions” meeting in January. Liu Jianhong, deputy secretary of the region’s Science and Technology Department, said it could bring new industries to the area and revitalize existing sectors.
]]>Chinese microblogging platform Weibo has reported a 111% year-on-year increase in profit while adding 70 million monthly users, local media is reporting.
The NASDAQ-listed company released its 2018 Q1 unaudited financial results on May 9, displaying a net profit of $99.1 million. The company’s revenue increased by 76% compared to this time last year, rising from $199.2 million to $349.9 million.
Weibo said that as of March 2018 it had a total of 411 million monthly active users (MAU), more than half of China’s internet population. Of these, 93% use mobile devices to access the network. Average daily users increased to 184 million, up 30 million compared to 2017 Q1.
Advertising and marketing drove the company’s increase in revenue, making $277.6 million from SMEs and large companies.
Weibo expects its Q2 revenue to reach up to $430 million.
The social network was recently embroiled in controversy. In April 2018, it announced plans to purge any homosexually-themed content as part of a “clean-up” of its platform. The move came amid a crackdown on “inappropriate” content by China’s media regulator. The statement sparked outcry online, causing the hashtag “I am gay” to go viral before being banned. The company eventually reversed its decision, saying it would only be targeting violent and vulgar content.
]]>Baidu founder and CEO Robin Li spoke at Peking University’s 120th-anniversary celebration, saying the areas surrounding the institution inspired him to pursue a career as an entrepreneur.
Li attended the university for four years in the late 1980s at a time when market-oriented ideas began to be espoused. He graduated from the Department of Information Management in 1991.
“I started to pay attention to people with beepers in Zhongguancun,” he is quoted as saying. “I began to learn that messages could instantly send information to the other side of the ocean.
“These were the ideal starting points for my further studies and entrepreneurship,” he said.
Li and his wife Melissa Ma, together with Baidu, recently donated RMB 660 million (S104 million) to the university to commemorate the celebration. The contribution forms part of the Peking University Baidu Fund, which aims to support research that is compatible with Baidu’s AI technologies. This includes research related to information management, medicine, economics, communications, and sociology.
The links between Chinese technology companies and research centers are becoming increasingly more important to the government. Chinese companies have faced growing resistance while doing business abroad. This, in turn, has caused China to question its dependence on foreign-made technology.
The inking of the agreement between Peking University and Baidu comes at a time in which Chinese president Xi Jinping has called for the private sector to speed up innovation in the country.
“Businesses must unceasingly make breakthroughs in core technology, mastering more key technologies with self-owned intellectual property rights and building up the ability to dominate industrial development. The country needs you to pick up the pace,” Xi said at an inspection of local chipmakers in Hubei province.
Last month e-commerce giant Alibaba teamed up with Tsinghua University to develop human-computer interaction technologies. The partnership aims to investigate the ways computers could read emotions and interpret mannerisms.
]]>Fosun International chairman and business magnate Guo Guangchang plans to purchase a majority stake in marriage and dating website Baihe.com for just under RMB 4 billion ($630 million), local media is reporting.
Baihe.com’s shareholders entered into an agreement with Yuanhong Investment to sell 869 million shares at a price of RMB 4.6 ($0.72) per share. Guo controls 100% of Yuanhong, which will make him a controlling shareholder of Baihe.com when the deal goes through. There has been no indication as to when the purchase will be concluded.
In December 2015, a Baihe.com subsidiary announced plans to acquire rival dating and marriage platform Jiayuan for $250 million. The company then reorganized to become the Baihe Jiayaun Network Group in September 2017.
Read more: Technology is changing how China’s youth find love
The Chinese online dating market has expanded drastically, and the sector is experiencing a period of increased growth. According to Statista, the number of users of online dating platforms will increase by 45% by 2020. In 2019, total revenue in the sector is predicted to reach RMB 4.4 billion, up 600% from 2010. This growth is attributed to more time being spent at work, skewed population demographics, societal pressure to find a partner, as well as the rise of casual dating.
Baihe operates a host of dating and marriage services around China. It provides an online-to-offline ecosystem that incorporates dating services, business cooperation, emotional counseling, and matchmaking services. The company reported an operating revenue increase from RMB 187 in 2016 to RMB 671 million in 2017 and has 310 million registered users.
The company operates a real-name policy and encourages users to submit information detailing their educational history, assets, and Sesame Credit rating.
Baihe-owned Jiayuan made news last year when WePhone founder Su Xiangmao committed suicide after being blackmailed by his recently married wife who he met using the service. Investigations found that despite real name verification requirements, users were able to register using photoshopped IDs.
]]>Second-tier city Guiyang is home to the youngest QQ users in the country, according to a recent report published by QQ Big Data. The city is closely followed by Shenzhen and Yunnan’s Yuxi.
China has an online community of over 760 million users, more than the entire population of Europe and twice that of the US. Over 60% of these users are between 15 and 34 years old. The country’s connected citizens predominantly use the internet for instant messaging, news, search engines, and videos.
The newly released report, entitled the 2018 National Urban Youth Index, utilizes data gathered from QQ’s 7.83 million monthly users between the ages of 15 and 35 years old. It ranks 88 Chinese cities according to the age of their users and is weighted according to the population. The “youngest cities” have a higher index, with the highest being 88.
According to the data, the number of young users in first-tier cities decreased slightly compared to last year. Shenzhen came in first out of all the first-tier cities, followed by Beijing, Shanghai and Tianjin, and Guangzhou.
However, Shanghai, Tianjin, and Guangzhou were missing from the Top 20 list, which also takes the cities’ year-on-year increase into account.
Henan outperformed all of the provinces surveyed, showing the fastest growing population of young QQ users. The province’s Luoyang city moved up 31 places compared to last year, ranking 14th in 2018.
Additionally, cities in the north of the country scored an average of 65, while cities in the south scored 68. Despite this, the average in the north increased year-on-year.
The index displays some interesting findings. The prevalence of non-first-tier cities in the top 20 shows they are just as attractive to young people as Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Beijing. Third, fourth, and even fifth-tier cities are slowing the rate of population loss to higher-tier cities. Additionally, the north-south divide is decreasing in size as young people return home from southern cities.
]]>The use of 5G networks will not lead to an increase in data consumption, and users won’t be required to replace their existing 4G SIM cards, network operator China Mobile has said.
Regulators are expected to begin issuing 5G licenses to mobile operators in the second half of 2019. As such, China Mobile said individuals wanting to make use of the new networks will need to replace their mobile phones. The current generation of smartphones is 4G-enabled, but 5G networks require different mobile phone hardware.
Radio networks are broken up bands, with 4G operating on frequencies below 6 GHz. However, 5G networks will be able to operate between 30 GHz and 300 GHz, resulting in less clutter for data transfers. The technology is promoted as being up to 100 times faster than current 4G networks.
China Mobile also mentioned that the increase in speed does not result in an increase in data transmission. Users can download the same file at a much faster rate, but the size of the file remains the same.
China aims to be a driving force in the development and deployment of 5G infrastructure and technology. China Unicom has already begun scaling back its 2G network to drive usage of 4G, and, in the near future, 5G. The country is host to an increasing number of pilot projects. In April 2018, network operators were given the approval to test 5G networks in 16 cities, including Hangzhou, Nanjing, Wuhan, Guiyang, Chengdu, and Shenzhen. Pilot programs have already been rolled out in Lanzhou and Xiong’an.
5G infrastructure providers are also pushing the deployment of the technology. Huawei has invested more than $600 million on 5G research since 2009, the same year the first 4G networks went into operation. It has become the first company to receive approval to sell its 5G base stations in the EU.
]]>Commuters using Beijing’s metro system will soon be able to utilize mobile payment platforms including WeChat Pay and Alipay to pay fares with the city’s new transit app. The service will be available on all but the Xijiao line from April 29, our sister site is reporting.
The Easy Pass (易通行 yitongxing) app will allow commuters to access the city’s metro system using QR codes. It uses a “ride first, pay later” feature, in which fares are deducted only when leaving the station. Similar platforms have already been implemented in Shanghai, Hangzhou, and Xi’an.
App users are also eligible to commute at the discounted rates of regular card holders. After spending RMB 100 in a month, subsequent trips are subject to a 20% discount. This increases to 50% after spending RMB 150. However, when spending reaches RMB 400, deductions no longer apply.
QR codes are one way of digitizing payments for commutes, but Apple takes a different approach. An iOS update released March 30 allows commuters in Beijing and Shanghai to pay fares using Apple Pay. The feature makes use of NFC technology in iPhones and Apple Watches, negating the need to open an app that generates a QR code.
Shortly after Apple’s announcement, Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun reacted by saying his company’s smartphones can be used can be used to pay for public transport in over 60 cities in China. He said nine Xiaomi phones are NFC-enabled.
However, NFC-enabled devices are expensive, while QR codes are ubiquitous, making them an accessible medium for payments.
]]>LinkedIn has begun to inform Chinese users that they need add their phone numbers for real-name registration. The professional networking platform says this is to meet local regulations.
Applicants are required to link their government-issued IDs to their phone numbers when purchasing a SIM card. In turn, the identity of an internet user can be verified by linking their phone number to their online accounts.
Chinese Linkedin users were greeted with a message requesting that they add their phone numbers to their accounts before using the service.
Despite identity verification rules being in place for a number of years, the government has recently moved to further formalize them. On August 25, 2017, internet regulator Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) announced that unidentified users of all online communities would not be permitted to post content or comment. The regulation is part of the country’s much-discussed Network Security Law, which serves as a framework for consolidating the rules relating to online spaces.
According to the CAC, the regulation seeks to “promote the healthy and orderly development of the internet forum community industry, protect the legitimate rights and interests of citizens, and safeguard national security and public interests.”
Other platforms, including Baidu, Weibo, and WeChat have required users to link their phone numbers to their accounts for some time.
]]>Sohu News General Manager Cai Mingjun will leave the company at the end of April to start a blockchain project, which Sohu will invest in, our sister site is reporting (in Chinese).
The report did not mention the sort of blockchain application Cai would be working on. However, at an entrepreneurship competition in February, he expressed his interest in the technology by highlighting its potential for creating assets in the digital world.
Private and public sector development and investment in blockchain projects have increased significantly recently. On March 27, China’s central bank institute launched a platform for developing independent intellectual property rights on the blockchain. On April 13, Tencent’s Pony Ma announced a medical blockchain project in Guangxi that aims to make medical prescriptions tamperproof. Most recently, government-led blockchain initiatives have been launched in Shenzhen and Fujian province.
Cai was one of the earliest Linux researchers in China and participated in the formation of the Beijing Linux Club. He joined Sohu in 2003 and was in charge of research and product development at Sogou. In 2011 he joined Shangrui Network Technology as a partner and CTO. Two years later, he returned to Sohu to lead the development of a content recommendation engine. Since 2014 he has been the general manager of Sohu’s news client.
Sohu’s stock plummeted on April 25 after the company released its quarterly financial results. Its report highlighted growing losses, which the company justified by attributing them to income tax expenses. Despite the company’s losses, it reported a revenue increase of over 20%.
]]>Chinese on-demand video streaming platform iQiyi (爱奇艺) has reported a 57% year-on-year increase in revenue in its first financial report since its IPO.
The unaudited results show the company’s first-quarter revenue was RMB 4.9 billion ($777.6 million). Its report also noted that iQiyi’s net loss dropped to RMB 395.7 million ($63.1 million) from RMB 1.1 billion ($173.6 million) during the same period in 2017.
Membership services and advertising drove the company’s revenue. iQiyi attributed this to the release of original content and numerous initiatives during the Chinese New Year.
According to market research firm eMarketer, iQiyi controls most of China’s on-demand video market. The company is closely followed by Tencent Video. iQiyi had 421.3 million monthly active users and about 126 million active daily mobile users in the last three months of 2017.
The Nasdaq-listed company went public in March, filing for an offering size of $1.5 billion. Many speculated about its IPO in the months preceding the event, with the company being one of the most anticipated listing candidates in 2018. In its latest financials, it said it expects to receive $2.36 billion in net proceeds from the IPO.
The company reports that its net revenue will increase to over RMB 5.8 billion ($924.0 million) in the second quarter of the year, but said the prediction is subject to “substantial uncertainty.”
In December 2017, iQiyi was granted exclusive distribution rights to six films nominated for Golden Globe Awards. These included “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri” and “The Shape of Water.” Earlier in 2017, it received the rights to distribute “La La Land” and “Moonlight”.
Earlier in 2017, the company signed a deal with US-based on-demand video platform Netflix. The agreement allowed the Chinese company to screen its US counterpart’s content in China. Netflix, which has been blocked from operating in the country, said it was focussing on content agreements rather than entering the market.
]]>Smartphone shipments in China dropped to 91 million units in the first quarter of 2018, representing the largest single quarter decline on record. This is the first time since the end of 2013 that shipments have fallen below 100 million units.
Technology market analysis firm Canalys said eight of the ten major smartphone manufacturers were hit with annual declines. The company said the record-breaking slump is due to rampant imitation resulting from intense competition in the market.
Smartphones manufacturers Gionee, Meizu, and Samsung were hit the hardest. All three vendors’ shipments fell to less than half of their respective Q1 2017 numbers.
Samsung was recently banned from selling a number of its handsets in China after a court ruled that it had infringed on Huawei patents. Even so, Huawei saw a 2% decline in shipments after overtaking Apple to become the world’s second-largest supplier of smartphones in September 2017. Oppo and Vivi also had a bad quarter, with both suppliers experiencing a 10% decline in shipments.
Xiaomi was the only manufacturer to defy the trend, growing its shipments by 37% to 12 million units. The company overtook Apple to become the country’s fourth-largest smartphone supplier.
“Xiaomi is the only vendor in the top-5 that is focused on the sub-RMB 1,000 (about $160) price segment and it owes close to 90% of its shipments to Redmi,” said research analyst Hattie He. The company is trying to shake its budget smartphone image and recently announced it would limit its net profit margins from its hardware sales to 5%.
The Chinese smartphone market is increasingly dominated by Huawei, Oppo, Vivo, and Xiaomi. All four companies saw their market shares increase, while other manufacturers, including Apple, lost footing.
Despite the decline, analysts expect the market to recover with the launch of flagship phones from Oppo, Vivi, and Huawei in the second quarter of 2018.
]]>On-demand video streaming service Youku is the latest to announce a self-imposed cleanup of its platform, saying it found a number of the movies it provides to be problematic, local media is reporting.
The company said that it is conducting a review and clean up operation targeting movies that deal with the distortion of historical figures, contain gang members as central characters, run counter to approved values, and excessively display the “dark side of human nature.”
The move follows a crackdown by the country’s media regulator, the State Administration of Radio and Television (SARFT), to clean up the internet. The SARFT has been placing increased pressure on technology companies to police the content on the web.
On April 13, Toutiao-backed Huoshan Short Video (火山小视频) temporarily shut one of its channels after being criticized by the regulator. On the same day, social networking platform Weibo announced plans to remove gay-themed content from its platform, later reversing its decision due to public outcry. It is interesting to note that Huoshan went back online with a new topic on the recommendation site called “Hello! New Age (你好!新时代)” focusing on “positive energy content.” Weibo introduced a similar section after it’s trending topics feature was temporarily shut down in February.
Huoshan and Weibo were not the only popular platforms hit by regulators last week. Watermelon Video (西瓜视频) barred mobile video uploads, live streams, and live comments, Tencent suspended short video playback within its messaging apps, Toutiao was instructed to permanently shut its Neihan Duanzi (内涵段子 “implied jokes”) app, numerous news services were suspended from Chinese app stores, and Toutiao temporary disabled live streaming and comments in its Douyin (抖音) app.
]]>In a case worth over RMB 800 million, numerous members of a syndicate have been arrested for allegedly buying and selling personal data over the internet, local media is reporting.
The gang was able to obtain personal information by falsely identifying themselves and hacking targeted individuals. This information included mobile phone location and movement data, credit information, academic records, and phone call data.
According to the report, the group charged RMB 10 ($1.60) a month to track one mobile phone and RMB 1000 ($160) a month to track multiple targets.
The arrests form part of a bigger operation run by the Ministry of Public Security and the Public Security Department of Shandong Province. The investigation also focussed on individuals in Guangdong province, where the task force seized 90 mobile phones and arrested 41 people.
“I bought and sold delivery address and mobile phone owner information via the internet,” an arrestee surnamed Shi is quoted as saying. “From December 2017 to the time I was arrested, I sold more than 300 pieces of information and earned $17,800.”
This is just the latest in a number of cases relating to the trade of personal information online. In December 2017, Beijing police announced they had busted a group of hackers who collected over one million pieces of personal information by taking advantage of network operators’ vulnerabilities.
In June of the same year, 22 people were arrested for allegedly stealing and selling iPhone user data.
The privacy of user data has become a hot topic in China. Its discussion was reignited after Baidu CEO Robin Li said Chinese internet users “are not that sensitive about privacy”. The resulting backlash caused a reporter from the Beijing News to conduct a privacy test on some of the country’s most popular apps, finding that they did not adequately protect users’ data.
Li’s comments came shortly after Baidu was accused of illegally obtaining user data by the Jiangsu Consumer Council. The company responded saying they have addressed the council’s concerns.
On April 4, an exhibition containing the purchased personal information of over 300,000 individuals opened in Hebei province. The artist bought the data and displayed it hoping to highlight the ease with which personal information can be obtained online. The exhibition was shut down shortly after opening.
]]>A representative from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) has said that cryptocurrencies are challenging to ban, but are worth experimenting with in the development of an international reserve currency.
“Countries are more focused on supervision and investor protection in transactions, such as anti-money laundering and market manipulation,” Yang Tao, Assistant Director of the Institute of Finance at CASS, wrote in a People’s Daily editorial (in Chinese).
This year has seen a number of cryptocurrency crackdowns in China. In February, the country’s central bank announced that it would ban trading on platforms both at home and abroad. The crackdown started late last year and focussed on initial coin offerings (ICOs) and aimed to shutter some of the more prominent exchanges. In March 2018, another crackdown was announced, along with the news that the central bank would be stepping up research and development of its own digital currency.
But Yang said that from a technical standpoint, digital currencies are challenging to ban entirely.
He also noted that digital currencies have a profound impact on the ways money is transmitted and the efficacy of payment settlements. He said cryptocurrencies can not necessarily be classified as currencies, but commodities.
“From a narrow perspective, digital currency represented by Bitcoin has its own ‘monetary attributes’ that are more often regarded as special assets or commodities. Therefore, its actual impact is often not on the monetary level, but on financial markets,” he said.
Yang also expressed enthusiasm for the idea of experimenting with cryptocurrencies as an international reserve currency but highlighted their volatility.
“Of course, if there are too many price fluctuations, speculation, and deflation restrictions, digital currencies cannot be used for payments, as you will only get farther away from the ‘money experiment,’” he said.
China has been an advocate of experimenting with an international reserve currency for years. Shortly after the 2008 financial depression, the governor of the People’s Bank of China Zhou Xiaochuan said that the crisis called for “creative reform of the existing international monetary system towards an international reserve currency.”
He said that its implementation would reduce future risks and enhance crisis management capabilities.
]]>Consumer electronics company Xiaomi is rumored to be applying for a Hong Kong listing with an estimated valuation of $65 billion to $70 billion, according to local media.
The report states the company is in the final stages of readying itself and plans to submit its application by May at the earliest. It also intends to list in Mainland China.
There has been no official statement from the company so far.
With its expected valuation, Xiaomi will be Hong Kong’s 12th biggest listed company based on market capitalization. Reports earlier this year suggested that the amount would be closer to $200 billion after an investment bank approved the target. There has been much speculation about the timing of the company’s IPO. In 2016, founder and CEO of Xiaomi Lei Jun said that he didn’t expect the company to go public before 2025.
Last year, the company was named one of China’s top three unicorns by the Hurun Research Institute. At the time it had a valuation of $30 billion, half that of Ant Financial, which also occupied one of the top three places.
Earlier this year, Lei said Xiaomi would return to being China’s number one smartphone manufacturer following the company’s “turning point” in 2017. Despite a slump in the global smartphone market, the company’s shipments were up by over 96% year-on-year in 2017.
Xiaomi has been rapidly expanding its product portfolio through investments in 89 companies, with many of these having been part of Xiaomi’s incubator from their founding.
]]>Hong Kong’s Vitasoy was born out of necessity. Dr. Kwee Seong Lo, the company’s founder, learned of the nutritional value of soy milk following a visit to Shanghai. Upon his return to Hong Kong, he started manufacturing and distributing the high protein drink to combat malnutrition in the city.
Lo’s story is not an isolated one. From Vitasoy’s soy milk to Chow Sang Sang’s jewelry, there are many examples of the dynamism of the city’s early entrepreneurs. Fast forward almost 80 years, and the spirit not only remains but is driving the city’s thriving startup scene.
“I think Hong Kong has always been the perfect environment for entrepreneurship,” said Terence Kwok, founder and CEO at Tink Labs. He explains that entrepreneurship in its broadest sense, not just in its association with technology companies, has always been part of the city’s culture.
“We have some of the greatest textile companies. We have some of the greatest hotel groups and restaurants. From regulation to taxes, to being a bridge between China and the West, it has always been the perfect place,” he said.
Kwok, speaking at the 2018 Internet Economy Summit held in Hong Kong last week, joined a panel discussion of founders from four of the city’s unicorns. Joining him were GOGOVAN co-founder and CEO Steven Lam, WeLab founder and CEO Simon Loong, and SenseTime co-founder Xu Bing.
The discussion, entitled “The Path to Unicorn: The Dialogue,” aimed to demystify the journey from seed to $1 billion valuation. And, in doing so, highlighted the opportunities Hong Kong provides for building a successful business.
“When we started, not really a lot of people talked about startups. When we talked about startups people thought we were silly,” said Lam, CEO of on-demand transportation company GOGOVAN.
The city has seen its number of homegrown startups rise drastically in the past few years. And perceptions have changed. According to data from Invest HK, there were 1925 startups in Hong Kong in 2016, a year-on-year increase of 24%. The city also has the 5th fastest growing startup ecosystem in the world.
Lam notes that when he founded GOGOVAN in 2013, there were only 900 applications to the city’s Cyberport Creative Micro Fund (CCMF). Five years on,“thousands and thousands of applications are flowing into the microfund, not including the incubation program.”
But for other companies, it is not just access to funding, changing views, and increased adoption of mobile technologies that are important. The city’s regulatory structures also determine the rate at which they grow.
“Fintech requires a few other pillars in order to be successful,” said WeLab’s Simon Loong. “What we saw in the past couple of years is government and financial industry support.”
Hong Kong has been a global financial hub for years. To remain so is even written into the city’s Basic Law. To stay competitive, regulators need to give fintech companies room to grow. The government set up several regulatory sandboxes, hoping to drive development in the sector.
And it’s not just fintech companies that are benefiting from the city’s regulatory structures. The metropolis is attracting increasing numbers of investors, and this is pushing founders to start companies.
“I noticed that a number of the top investors are actually in the same building,” said SenseTime co-founder Xu Bing. The company, which provides AI-powered facial recognition technology, recently closed a round of funding worth $600 million. It is now the most valuable AI firm in the world. “Almost all the top investors are gathering here in Hong Kong, so it’s easier to talk to them about our ideas, our philosophy, what we want to do, and what values we want to create.”
For unicorns like SenseTime, academic prowess plays a significant role in their success. According to Xu, Hong Kong is the perfect city to recruit researchers and scientists dealing with AI.
“Deep learning started back in 2011 [and] is now the driving force behind AI”, said Xu. “Between 2011 and 2013 there were totally 29 papers in the world that were using deep learning to solve computer vision. Half of them were published in Hong Kong.” This is why the company is setting up a core research center in the city, hoping to attract even more AI talent.
Despite the city’s many advantages, it’s by no means a startup’s panacea. “I think one of the problems that we had in fintech was there is a lot of finance talent but not a lot of tech talent in the past,” said Loong.
The city’s proximity to one of Mainland China’s tech centers solved this problem. “Hong Kong has a very deep pool of finance talents, Shenzhen has a very deep pool of tech and software development talent. Our solution was [to] combine the best of the two,” he said.
This lack of tech skills correlates to the rate of experimentation by companies in the city, according to Xu. He notes that during the Mainland’s rapid development in the past ten years, Hong Kong has mostly been left behind. “The mainland is still more open to AI. They are willing to apply more technologies to do upgrades,” he said. “Technology companies should leverage more of China’s resources.”
With Mainland China on the city’s doorstep, Hong Kong startups are uniquely positioned to utilize its vast pool of technical talent and enter its massive market. When the city was handed back to China in 1997, it made up around 18% of the country’s GDP. That number fell to 3% in 2017 due to China’s enormous economic growth.
The founders are well aware of this. While Hong Kong provides an exciting testing ground for new platforms, it is a relatively small market, something that they implore startups to consider.
“Hong Kong, especially for the internet economy, is a relatively small population,” said Kwok. “Hence, from day one there needs to be, not necessarily a global view or a global path, but at least an ambition for achieving that, otherwise it’s going to be quite difficult,” he said.
]]>Chinese entertainment app Watermelon Video (西瓜视频) has barred new mobile video uploads, live streams, and live comments, saying it is cleaning up the platform to meet legal standards, local media is reporting.
The move comes amid a crackdown on online content lead by China’s media regulator, the State Administration of Radio and Television (SARFT). It puts increased pressure on technology companies to police content on their platforms.
Watermelon Video said that it had scrutinized the content on its platform and had found 500,000 videos it deems inappropriate, resulting in the ban of 38,000 user accounts. It noted that in the future measures would be put in place to improve auditing standards through manual checks and the use of artificial intelligence.
The SARFT-led effort has already resulted in the suspension of video playback in Tencent’s messaging apps, the permanent closure of Toutiao’s Neihan Duanzi (内涵段子 “implied jokes”) app, the suspension of numerous news services from Chinese app stores, an apology from Toutiao’s CEO, and the temporary disabling of live streaming and comments in Toutiao’s Douyin (抖音).
]]>Naked Hub has confirmed to its staff that they are being bought by WeWork China.
In a recording of naked Hub’s staff meeting obtained by TechNode, naked Group founder Grant Horsfield said, “It is not an acquisition, we are not going anywhere,” instead choosing to refer to the move as a merger when talking to employees.
Naked Hub and WeWork confirmed the sale in an official statement, saying the two companies hope to make businesses in the region more successful.
Reports initially indicated that the sale would go through for $400 million. Naked Hub, founded in 2005, has 46 working spaces in Asia, with 20 of those located in Shanghai and Beijing.
Dominic Penaloza, CIO of naked Hub, said at the meeting that the acquisition was not one of convenience.
“This merger is not a case of ‘let’s merge to cut costs, to be more efficient,’” said Penaloza.
He reassured the employees that they would not be losing their jobs and that the aim was to hire even more people. “This rocket ship is the biggest, fastest rocket ship in the galaxy,” Penaloza said referring to the two companies joining forces.
In the recording, Horsfield welcomed WeWork co-founder Adam Neuman on stage, who then addressed naked Hub employees.
The reason we are here today is because there are companies around this world who think WeWork and naked Hub are co-working companies, well that’s funny because I started WeWork and I didn’t start a co-working company. What we started is a company that helps the world, that helps people make a life, not just a living. When I met Grant two and half years ago, I didn’t pay attention but before I knew it, you had built a company not just of design and technology, but of excellence of service, lifetstyle and connection. [We did this] because naked Hub is the only company in the world that is not a co-working space and because its not, we want to be a part of that. —Adam Neumann
Neumann went on to say this is the biggest commitment WeWork has ever made.
“In naked Hub, we have found an equal who shares our thinking about the importance of space, community, design, culture, and technology,” Neumann said in a statement.
Local media reports said that naked Hub had not received the money from a round of funding in January. Additionally, reports say a planned merger with JustCo in Hong Kong fell through.
Update 12 April 16:20: Included confirmation of the sale from naked Hub and WeWork
]]>Telecommunications operator China Unicom (中国联通) has begun closing down its 2G network and requested that services using the technology cease development, our sister site is reporting.
The company has already started the process of frequency reduction and has shut down over 100 low-traffic base stations, a move that it says will help further develop its 4G network.
According to the report, China Unicom’s 2G users make up 2% of its 280 million-strong customer base. Once the 2G services have been halted entirely over 5 million customers who made use of the company’s 2G services will no longer have access to the network.
The company said removing 2G infrastructure could be realized in a short time.
In total, there are over 1.57 million 2G base stations and 290 million 2G users in China. Additionally, vast numbers of internet of things (IoT) devices are reliant on these networks to communicate.
China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology last year began allowing operators to deploy narrowband internet of things (NB-IoT) technology, which enables devices that use small amounts of data to communicate almost anywhere, over the GSM band.
There were over 888 million people using China’s 4G networks last year, representing 65% network penetration. Users making use of 3G and 4G services accounted for over 1 billion of the country’s population.
While China Unicom is rolling back its 2G services in favor of 4G, China is hoping to be at the forefront of 5G rollout and development. The country is host to a growing number of 5G pilot projects, with a presence in numerous cities around the country.
In December, China Telecom set up 5G base stations in Lanzhou. Other cities hosting pilot projects include Shenzhen, Chengdu, Xiong’an, Suzhou, and Shanghai.
]]>Tencent has suspended the ability to play short videos in its WeChat and QQ messaging apps, requiring users to copy the link and paste it in their browser to the view the videos, local media is reporting.
The suspension will prevent users from viewing videos from the company’s own Weishi platform, along with content from Douyin, Kuaishou, and Xigua Video.
The move comes amidst a broader crackdown on online content. Bytedance’s apps have received a great deal of attention from China’s media regulator, The State Administration of Press, Publication, Radio, Film, and Television (SAPPRFT). Last week, it was told to better control the “inappropriate” content on its Jinri Toutiao platform. Issuing the same order to Kuaishou, SAPPRFT said that dealing with vulgar content was of “high importance.”
Shortly after the order, Jinri Toutiao, along with Phoenix News and NetEase news had their apps suspended from various app stores in the country.
Toutiao was again targeted this week after it was ordered to permanently close its Neihan Duanzi (内涵段子 “implied jokes”) app for its inappropriate content. The platform offered a selection of short videos, jokes, photos, and memes. The company’s CEO and founder Zhang Yiming later apologized, saying the that the company took full responsibility for the app being shut down.
“The content that appears [on Neihan Duanzi] goes against core socialist values, and we did not do a thorough job in guiding public opinion,” he said in an open letter.
The company also temporarily disabled live streaming and comments in its short video app Douyin (抖音), saying the platform is currently undergoing a “system upgrade” and that the features would return following the enhancements.
]]>Every weekend, the parents of Shanghai’s unmarried population gather to find potential partners for their adult children. Lining the walkways of Shanghai’s People’s Square, they post their offspring’s details on open umbrellas —height, weight, education, and occupation— hoping to attract the parents of other singles. Once a potential match has been found, the marriage negotiations begin.
Chinese matchmaking traditions go back generations. Prior to the 1950s, parents would choose prospective partners for their children based on matching by socioeconomic class. This practice, known as “matching windows and doors” (门当户对 méndānghùduì), still exists to this day, albeit in a much-diminished form.
Online dating is changing this, and with it, Chinese society. From Tinder-like Tantan (探探) to Momo (陌陌), to marriage-focussed Baihe (百合网), tech companies are taking advantage of increasingly independent young adults. And the country’s demographics.
“Traditionally, parents would have been able to exert considerable influence over both who their adult children dated, as well as the form of dating, itself,” Dr. Sampson Blair, family sociologist at The State University of New York and former visiting professor at East China Normal University, told TechNode.
“This has, quite obviously, changed greatly over recent decades, as young adults have become increasingly more autonomous in this regard,” he said.
Just under half of China’s 1.4 billion people fall between the ages of 25 and 54 years old. Most are men. Within this total, 200 million are unmarried, according to government records. One study shows that 54 million people made use of online dating services in 2016, a number that is expected to increase by 24 million, or 45%, by 2022. Online dating companies have even more optimistic usage statistics, with each firm asserting they have 100 million or more users.
The generation born between 1982 and 1997 is driving this growth. Making up 20% of China’s population, this group is just reaching (or about to) the legal marriage age—22 years old for men and 20 years old for women.
The ubiquity of smartphones and rapid migration to the online world has also played a significant role. Whether on the metro, in a coffee shop, or walking the streets of China’s many metropoles, the prevalence of smartphones is hard to miss.
“Such usage [of smartphone technology] has become the norm among young adults, so it is hardly surprising that they are now using it to start and maintain intimate relationships,” says Blair.
Today’s youth feel the same societal pressures that weighed on their parents. They are expected to get married and have children just like their parents. However, unlike their guardians—whose choices were restricted by geography and social class—the pool of potential mates has swelled with the rise of the internet dating.
According to Dr. Wang Pan, author of Love and Marriage in Globalizing China, new digital matchmaking tools are not so much an innovation, as “a reinvention of the old model.” They provide some liberation, but “continue to carry on the core Chinese marriage values,” she told TechNode.
One such example is Baihe. While other online services take a more “casual“ approach, the company provides a platform for finding a potential spouse. Baihe collects user data that panders to the more traditional aspects of courtship in China. Users are expected to supply their real names, information relating to property and car ownership, educational qualifications, employment details, household registration (户口 hùkǒu) information and Sesame Credit scores (芝麻信用 zhīmaxìnyòng).
The service, founded in 2005, claims to have over 100 million users. It also operates an online-to-offline (O2O) service in which its users can make use of its many physical stores for matchmaking purposes and links customers to businesses in the marriage industry.
“A primary part of Baihe’s business is covering the comprehensive process from matching to marriage, providing a one-stop-shop for love and marriage,” says Baihe founder and CEO Tian Fanjiang. “In the future, the Baihe website will not only be a matching service provider, but also extend to all business areas related to love and marriage, including consulting, consumer services, financial services, and media offerings.”
Baihe-owned Jiayuan.com (世纪佳缘) also focuses on marriage-related services. It claims to have over 170 million users and operates offline stores in 71 cities, making it the biggest online dating site in the country. The website was founded in 2003 by Fudan University student Gong Haiyan after she failed to find a partner through already existing dating sites. One year after launching, Gong found a husband on the website she created.
The data collected by the sites show how unique the China market is. Confucian ideals and parental influence continue to play an important role when selecting a partner and, in the eyes of China’s young adults, love is intertwined with social mobility, physical and mental compatibility, as well as family background.
“Age, educational level, overseas background, dating experience, and family background are important for Chinese clients looking for love,” says Wang, commenting on critical data points for online dating and matchmaking companies.
While platforms like Baihe and Jiayuan provide opportunities for those who have their hearts set on finding a potential life partner, Tantan and Momo are designed for more casual dating.
“The biggest difference between Tantan and Baihe is the goal,” a 24-year-old male Tantan user surnamed Liu told Technode. “People who use Tantan only want to have a boyfriend or girlfriend, but people who use Baihe want to get married.”
In his opinion, people use services like Baihe and Jiayuan because of parental pressure to start a family. “Maybe I don’t want to get married yet,” he says when asked if he has used the marriage-focused services before.
Another user of both Momo and Tantan surnamed Li, agrees. “People use them because they are single and with the app, they can meet pretty girls,” he says. “I’ve never seen my friends use Baihe.”
Liu says that although he would like to meet people at a bar or coffee shop, using an app allows access away from social events. “Real places would be better, but apps are more convenient. You can use it everywhere and anytime,” he says.
The increase in active users has quickly filled bank accounts. In 2013, the total revenue for the sector was RMB 1.93 billion. This more than doubled to RMB 4 billion at the end of 2017 and is expected to reach over RMB 5 billion by 2020.
“[The] newly-born population during 1982-1997 shows that demand for marriage will remain high in the next 5-10 years. The large population with demand for dating and marriage is the potential for market growth,” market research firm iResearch detailed in its 2018 China’s Online Dating & Matchmaking Sector Report.
Additionally, the average revenue per user (ARPU) has increased steadily over the past two years, rising from $1.77 in 2016 to $1.93 in 2018.
According to Momo’s financial results, the company saw their user base increase from 81.1 million at the end of 2016 to 99.1 million a year later. Tantan, which was acquired by Momo earlier this year, reported similar results. According to the company, over 100 million people have signed up, and their monthly active users exceed 10 million. The app has enabled between three and four billion matches, in which two users express interest in each other, in the three years since it launched. This compares to the eight billion matches US-based Tinder has facilitated since 2012.
In 2000, it was estimated that 5% of Chinese men in their late thirties would never get married. By 2030, that number is expected to rise to 25%. These statistics may be even higher in the countryside where poverty is rife, and men are expected to accumulate enough money to attract a prospective wife.
Additionally, the rate of separation has soared while the marriage rate has dwindled. The crude divorce rate, indicated by the number of splits for every 1000 people, has increased from 1.5 to 3 in the past ten years, according to government data.
“People are not obliged to get married, they can stay single, postpone their marriages, not have kids or just cohabit without getting married,” says Wang. She explains that the increase in the divorce rate is caused in part by rising gender equality and decreasing stigma associated with separations. Also, simplified divorce laws are helping people leave loveless marriages.
“You can see marriage is deinstitutionalized as an increasing number of people choose not to get married or have children. The social pressure of having to marry and give birth to children is not as strong as prior,” she says.
Despite this, Mu Guangzong, a professor at the Population Research Institute at Peking University, insists that young people should avoid the growing trend of staying single.
“Staying single may be gaining acceptance among some people in China, but it will have a negative impact on the birth rate and sustainable social development, and therefore should not be encouraged,” he said in an editorial.
Platforms like Momo, Tantan, Jiayuan, and Baihe are, in their own ways, seeking to address these concerns. Wang Yu, CEO of Tantan believes that young people in China have very few opportunities to make new friends, resulting in social isolation.
“College students basically have no parties and rarely go clubbing. They are too busy, so almost don’t have ways to meet people offline,” he said at TechCrunch Shanghai last year. He says his company offers users a way for more introverted users to meet new people, and in doing so, tackle the concerns of there being too many singles.
Baihe also started to help individuals with little time meet a prospective life partner. The company claims to achieve this by introducing psychology into the field of matchmaking. Like Jiayuan, it was created out of necessity. Founder Wang Lifan noticed the difficulty her single friends had finding partners and decided to start an online matchmaking service. Unlike Jiayuan’s founder, who spent 20 days designing the platform’s first homepage, Wang had graduated from Tsinghua University’s computer studies department.
According to researchers, online dating can also have a profound effect on marriage diversity within an online community. Previously, potential partners would be introduced by family members or friends, sourcing them from their social circles. With the rise of internet dating, people are meeting complete strangers. This significantly increases the chances of pairing with someone from an entirely different background.
This finding is becoming more and more salient in China. According to the Center for China and Globalization, the number of foreigners increased by 50% between 2000 and 2013. Additionally, over 1500 foreigners were granted green cards in 2016, a 160% year-on-year increase. In the same year, the number of cross-cultural marriages swelled by 2.5% in Shanghai.
Despite its meteoric rise, online dating has experienced its share of confidence issues. “Maybe I’m just traditional, so I don’t trust those apps,” an individual who requested not to be named told TechNode. The idea of trust is a big issue when using services that gather so much personal information.
In August last year, police arrested 600 people and shut dating apps associated with 21 companies involved in creating bots to interact with male users. The platform encouraged users to buy digital gifts for “girls” with the promise that they would receive special privileges in the form of explicit videos from their non-existent online dates.
Jiayuan was also at the center of controversy last year when WePhone developer Su Xiangmao leaped to his death after marrying a 29-year-old woman who he met on the platform. Reports later revealed the woman had blackmailed him for RMB 10 million. Netizens expressed outrage that fraudsters were still able to access sensitive online services like dating sites.
Even with the negative press, data shows the usage of these online platforms remained constant, while the use of traditional matchmaking services waned. “Technology has largely displaced the services of matchmakers, as it is much easier, and much less embarrassing, for young people to use dating apps and online services to find a partner,” explains Blair.
“In coming years, I fully anticipate the further expansion of dating apps and social media, as this has clearly become a preferred form of social interaction by today’s young adults,” he says.
]]>Chinese mapping company AutoNavi (高德地图) has launched a ride-hailing service in Chengdu and Wuhan and is hiring drivers in Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Hangzhou, with plans to launch in these cities, local media is reporting.
The company, owned by Alibaba, will not collect commissions from its drivers, allowing them to earn the full amount a passenger pays for the trip. Other operators, including Meituan and Didi, charge their drivers up to 10% the total cost of the trip. However, AutoNavi doesn’t provide its drivers with subsidies like other ride-hailing companies.
Alibaba could make use of the data it collects to enhance its location-based services capabilities. In 2015, AutoNavi announced the launch of LBS+, a platform that provides location-based service solutions to businesses in car rental, O2O, and smart devices.
It previously highlighted that it planned to monetize its platform through third-parties that use its data and trading user data.
The company is entering an already competitive space, with Didi and Meituan battling for their piece of the market. Most recently, Meituan launched its ride-hailing service in Shanghai, hoping to further challenge Didi.
]]>Editor’s note: Rumors are rife in China, especially so in a hotly contested area like transportation and O2O services. This news is unconfirmed and the veracity of Mobike’s financial and operational situation as outlined is unclear.
Update 10:02 04 Apr 2018: The purchase has been confirmed by multiple sources. Follow our coverage here.
Rumors of Chinese e-commerce and ride-hailing company Meituan-Dianping’s plan to acquire bike rental firm Mobike are circulating on Chinese social media.
Sina Weibo CEO Wang Gaofei, under the moniker Laiquzhijian (来去之间, lái qù zhī jiān), forwarded the news on microblogging platform Weibo, lending it credibility among local pundits. There has been no official statement from either company so far.
He claimed that Meituan plans to buy the bike rental company for $3.7 billion, including US$1.2 billion in cash, US$1.5 billion in equity, and US$1 billion in debt. Local media have reported unconfirmed details of Mobike’s internal financial statements that show the company owes up to RMB 6 billion in user deposits and another RMB 1 billion to suppliers, totaling more than $1 billion.
According to local media reports, the company has supposedly seen its number of daily rides decline over the past few months resulting in the need for operating expense and asset investment of up to RMB 810 million a year. In January the company’s total rides fell to less than 10 million per day while its daily trips per bike have decreased to one, say local media.
“Mobike reaffirms our smart bike sharing platform has over 200 million registered users, supports over 30 million rides every day, and operates over 9 million Mobikes connected through IoT technology,” a spokesperson for Mobike told
Mobike was thought to be merging with competitor ofo, speculation that was later denied by company CEO Davis Wang, saying that a “merger is not an option for the company.” Rumors also spread suggesting it was entering a round of funding led by Meituan. However, this was later repudiated by both parties.
Meituan is seeking a Hong Kong IPO with a valuation of US$60 billion. It recently launched its ride-hailing service in Shanghai after a trial in Nanjing. However, shortly after operations began, the company was summoned by city authorities for failing to link the data of vehicles and staff to the city’s supervision platform.
Update 04 April 7:05: Now includes official statement from Mobike.
Update 03 April 18:25: Caixin is reporting that Meituan is in talks with Mobike to buy a large part of the bike-rental business. A source has said that the final figure has not been agreed upon and the deal is being brokered by Pony Ma, CEO of Tencent.
]]>Professional networking platform Linkedin has appointed former CCtalk CEO Lu Jian as head of its China operation with immediate effect, our sister site is reporting. He has been tasked with research and business development at the company.
Lu, a graduate of Dartmouth College, has experience at technology companies in the US and China. He has previously worked for Apple and founded a California-based company supplying digital fingerprinting and identification products and services. Before joining Linkedin, he headed up online teaching platform CCtalk and was a partner at Hujiang.
In his new role, he will work directly under Mohik Shroff, Senior Vice President and Head of Global Engineering.
Linkedin China launched in 2014 with limited functionality. Shortly after entering the country, it had amassed four million users. Derek Shen, former VP of Renren, headed the company until the middle of last year when Francis Tsang took over for the interim period.
The company now has close to 40 million users in the country, with more than 1,000 of its customers holding positions in government, technology, finance, communication, and automotive industries.
Linkedin is seen as being one of the most successful foreign technology companies doing business in China but is facing increased competition. Last year, Maimai, the company’s biggest rival raised US$75 million in its Series C round of funding. Maimai, which launched several months before Linked, has been edging closer to its competitor over the years.
Despite its success in China, Linkedin ran into trouble at the end of last year. According to reports, Linkedin blocked its users from posting jobs on the site after failing to comply with newly-imposed government regulations requiring the verification of its users’ identities.
]]>The cost of mobile data in China ranks 53rd in the world, with the country experiencing a decrease in data costs for six consecutive years, local media is reporting.
The National Development and Reform Commission today released its first report on consumer development in the country, documenting that the price of fixed-line broadband has also fallen during the same period.
According to the report, monthly revenue per user from fixed broadband dropped by 18% in 2017, while mobile data revenue decreased by almost 52%.
Chinese carriers impose additional fees on individuals using mobile services outside of the province in which their SIM card is registered. The report includes proposals to do away with these roaming fees, as well as expanding access to free internet in public areas.
According to the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), China’s mobile data and monthly broadband costs rank 53rd and 89th in the world (from low to high) respectively. While the cost of internet data is reportedly decreasing, the speed of the internet is increasing. China’s Broadband Alliance released a report last year claiming that fixed-line broadband speeds had risen for 11 consecutive quarters.
The report attributed the increase in speed to the government pushing improved internet infrastructure in the country, including increased bandwidth for international traffic. However, a study conducted by Cable.co.uk, China’s internet is ranked as the 134th fastest in the world, placing just behind Iran and in front of Mauritania.
]]>Xiaomi CEO Lei Jun has said that the company’s smartphones already enable commuters to pay for public transport in over 60 cities around the country. He made the comment shortly after Apple announced that its iOS 11.3 update would allow for the integration of Beijing and Shanghai-based transport cards in Apple Pay.
Taking to Weibo, Lei said, “Xiaomi’s nine NFC-enabled mobile phones already support the use of 63 cities’ public transport cards!”
Earlier today, Apple announced support for the addition of new transport cards and the transfer of user’s existing balances from their cards to their mobile wallet. Dubbed Express Transit, the feature allows Apple users to use their iPhones or Apple Watches to pay for trips on public transport.
The feature is also available in Shenzhen and Guangzhou.
In 2016, Xiaomi and UnionPay announced an NFC-based service for public transport payments. Initially, the platform was only available in Shanghai and Shenzhen but later expanded to other cities around China.
Numerous cities in the country now offer mobile payments on public transport, among them are Hangzhou and Xi’an. Additionally, Shanghai began accepting Alipay in January while Tencent’s payment platform is accepted in over 20 cities. Both Xiaomi and Apple are small players in a market dominated by Alipay and WeChat.
]]>In 1968, Stanley Kubrick famously highlighted the promise of emotionally-aware artificial intelligence. In 2001: A Space Odyssey, the sentient robot, HAL 9000, acknowledged a fellow crew member’s anguish by stating, “Look, Dave, I can see you’re upset about this.”
At the time, this display of acute understanding of complex human emotion by a machine was, much like the film, in the realm of science fiction. However, 50 years later, over a third of the world’s population possess devices with the potential to infer a user’s emotional state.
The capabilities of objects we carry with us every day—smartphones, fitness trackers, and watches—have entered an emotion-sensing Cambrian Explosion. They are fast becoming active participants in personalizing the world around us and influencing the content we consume on a daily basis.
“There’s this scenario I’ve postulated,” Derek Lei, General Manager of Artificial Intelligence at Emotibot, a company developing emotionally-aware bots, told TechNode. “Let’s say you’re talking with your voice assistant and you sound pretty angry. In the world of connected devices, it could communicate with your car and say: ‘Derek is pissed off this morning. He broke up with his girlfriend’.”
Based on the information it receives, your car would then be able to react by adapting its internal environment. It could play music, avoid topics on the radio dealing with breakups, and soften the lighting. These changes, along with your reaction to them, would go into your profile to further orchestrate a world just for you.
Read more: Emotibot is an AI-powered chatbot that understands human emotions
Emotion detection is fundamental if companies want to provide these kinds of personalizations. Unlike other forms of data collection, it can adapt immediately.
“When people talk about personalization, it is understanding your purchase history and knowing who you are from what you tell us,” said Lei. “But with emotion AI being deployed on smart devices, you are able to personalize at that moment.”
While emotionally-aware devices themselves may not have the ability to adapt your environment to your mood, other connected devices could. By incorporating emotion-sensing technologies into the Internet of Things (IoT), Lei says it takes personalization “to another level.” Increasing the number of these devices not only improves customization and user experience, but also provides additional sensing information from the environment, improving the accuracy of the mood detection.
The vast majority of people in China may not have access to voice assistants, but they do own smartphones. According to data from Statista, smartphone penetration in the country will reach over 50% in 2018 and almost 55% by 2020. As a result, these devices have received an increasing amount of attention for their potential emotion-sensing abilities.
Li Wenzhong is a researcher at Nanjing University studying automatic emotion detection using sensors in smartphones. Along with three other researchers, he developed MoodExplorer, an Android app that uses smartphone sensor data to detect multiple emotions simultaneously and asynchronously. The app collects environmental, contact, app usage, and activity data, correlating it with feelings manually reported by a user.
“There are other approaches for mood detection,” Li told Technode. “Different from them, our approach is based on wearable devices such as smartphones or smart bracelets. Our work tries to use the sensing data from wearable sensors and the app usage information from smartphones to achieve mood detection.”
Incorporating emotion detection into smartphones not only results in the technology being accessible but also makes sure it is mobile. Users of smartphones tend to carry them wherever they go, increasing exposure time and detection accuracy.
Li explains that the use of emotion detection in smart devices benefits both businesses and consumers. Knowing an individual’s mood enables enterprises to deploy highly-targeted advertising and make better media recommendations, including “different styles of music, movies, books, and other products.”
Conversely, businesses understanding mood metrics save customers from viewing irrelevant advertising and spending extended periods choosing a song to listen to or film to watch.
And, according to Lei, in-store experiences can be personalized according to your mood:
“If you’re a retailer and the [customer] doesn’t look very happy, what do you do? Perhaps you would want your [in-store robot] to react in a very happy way. Or maybe you want it to empathize. It really depends on how the company wants to program it.”
Social media can also enhance mood detection. When constructing a training set for developing a mood-sensing model, Li says that they rely on users to record their moods manually alongside the data collected automatically by the app. However, if sensing data is linked to social media, moods can be inferred automatically by analyzing the types of words used in user posts, negating the need for manual reporting.
It also provides a way to make sensing data more accurate. “Mood detection with smartphones and with social media can be done independently, and their results can be cross-validated to form a more accurate model,” said Li.
But the increased personalization that results from emotion-sensing technologies could bring with it a rise in data that can be collected by corporations, and in turn, a degradation of personal privacy.
Earlier this year, CCTV and Tencent Research found that over 76% of Chinese people feel AI is a threat to their privacy. While the study, which included 8000 participants, made use of a relatively small sample size, it does underscore that people in the country are increasingly aware of privacy issues.
Expressing his concern, Lei highlights a possible scenario:
“If my smart device was listening to my conversation with my girlfriend last night and it decided we had a breakup, then in the morning it could react accordingly,” he said. “Similarly, a corporation could listen in on that to sell some services.”
While some are quite happy to give up personal information on social media and on the apps they use, others aren’t. “For some people, mood itself is private, and they are reluctant to be detected by an app,” said Li.
Nonetheless, the applications provided by mood-sensing technologies are hard to ignore. While currently in the nascent stage, emotion detection shows signs of great promise and increased ubiquity in the years to come.
“It is hard to predict the future. But it is sure that in the future, smart home and wearable devices will explore more human factors such as preferences, context, and mood. Detecting mood is one step towards a smarter, personalized, humanized design for smart home techniques. Such techniques can also be useful for the development of future robots that can understand human moods,” concludes Li.
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