China’s rapid GenAI patents surge sets stage for global AI leadership

China’s rapid advancements in generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) highlight its determination to lead the global AI landscape.

  • Thursday, 22nd August 2024 Posted 1 year ago in by Phil Alsop

The significant surge in GenAI patent filings—nearly 50% of the global total—reflects the country’s aggressive push towards technological leadership. This drive is not only reshaping industries but also setting new standards for innovation, positioning China as a formidable contender in the AI race, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

Kiran Raj, Practice Head of Disruptive Tech at GlobalData, comments: “China's aggressive pursuit of GenAI patents positions the country as a major player in the global AI revolution, directly challenging the US in the race for technological supremacy. This drive aligns closely with China's stated objective of achieving global AI leadership by 2030."

Anil Sharma, Practice Head of Patents Analytics at GlobalData, adds: “The continued growth in China's GenAI patents suggests that we may see new breakthroughs in diverse applications, including but not limited to artistic image generation, automated video and image creation and enhancement, speech synthesis, text processing, analyzing medical images, resource optimization and power load forecasting. While challenges remain, the potential applications of these patents are vast and can have a profound impact on various industries.”

The Patent Analytics database of GlobalData's Disruptor Intelligence Center reveals that China has accounted for 49.1% of global GenAI patents over the last three years, surpassing the US at 48.5%. Other countries, such as South Korea (0.7%), Taiwan (0.4%), and Australia (0.3%), trail significantly, showcasing that the GenAI landscape is currently a duopoly.

The analysis also highlights a substantial 48.9% year-on-year increase in GenAI patent filings from China in 2023 compared to 2022, with major contributors including the State Grid Corporation of China, Zhejiang University, Nanjing University, and Baidu. This surge indicates China’s efforts to enhance AI capabilities across sectors, from technology and media to semiconductors and automotive.

Moreover, an analysis of the patents filed by the four biggest technology companies of China i.e., Baidu, Alibaba Group Holding, Tencent Holdings, and Huawei Technologies shows a strong focus on developing large language models and generative adversarial networks across applications ranging from text processing and speech recognition to resource optimization and power load forecasting.

In the real-world setup, GlobalData’s Innovation Explorer database highlights how Chinese companies are advancing GenAI. For instance, Beijing-based Kuaishou Technology recently introduced the “Kling Large Model (Kling),” an AI model capable of generating realistic videos from text prompts using a diffusion-based transformer architecture (DiT). Kling directly challenges OpenAI’s Sora and Meta’s 3D Gen in the burgeoning video generation AI space, with its unique 3D spatiotemporal joint attention mechanism.

The database includes a variety of GenAI models and applications from the top Chinese technology companies. Notable examples include Huawei's Pangu, a large language model tailored for the mining industry, ZTE Corp.'s telecom-oriented Nebula LLM, and Alibaba's customer service-focused GenAI chatbot, Tongyi Qianwen.

Raj concludes: "China's rapid progress in GenAI highlights the country’s pivotal role in driving the global AI innovation. Continued research and development in this field can deliver groundbreaking advancements to revolutionize multiple industries. However, challenges such as ethical AI usage, data privacy concerns, and navigating international regulatory frameworks must be addressed if China is to secure global leadership in AI."

AvePoint has introduced updates to its Confidence Platform, with a focus on AI data protection, multicloud resilience, and governance capabilities.
inforcer introduces Copilot Manager to support MSPs in delivering AI services, including features related to monitoring and managing Shadow AI usage.
Guardz outlines how AI is influencing cybersecurity, with the report highlighting identity-related issues and vulnerabilities affecting MSPs, based...

Kaseya launches Agentic IT management platform

Posted 19 hours ago by Sophie Milburn
Kaseya has introduced an autonomous IT management system that uses AI and unified data to support IT operations and security management.
Westcon-Comstor has integrated its value-added services into the Microsoft Marketplace, aiming to support partner operations and improve scalability.

Pax8 and NinjaOne forge alliance to enhance SMB security

Posted 21 hours ago by Sophie Milburn
Pax8 teams up with NinjaOne, aiming to strengthen managed service providers through enhanced solutions and security infrastructure for SMBs.

Governing autonomous AI: challenges and solutions

Posted 1 day ago by Sophie Milburn
Exploring identity challenges with AI agents and governance opportunities for secure and scalable AI execution.

The risks of unsupervised AI adoption in UK enterprises

Posted 1 day ago by Sophie Milburn
As UK businesses increasingly adopt AI, risky data-sharing practices arise, underscoring the need for enhanced oversight and security measures.