BEIJING – Chinese tech giant announced more than 10 new AI-based applications on Tuesday, just days after its .
Among the product reveals was a generative AI-integrated word processing app called WPS AI, created by Shanghai-listed Kingsoft Office. The company built the tool using the AI model on which Baidu's Ernie bot is based, as well as Baidu's "Qianfan" cloud platform for AI models, according to a release.
Nearly 10,000 businesses are actively using Baidu's Qianfan cloud platform each month, the company claimed.
Baidu also announced that more than 6 million users have used an AI-powered tool that sits inside its Google drive-like cloud product. The AI assistant can search documents, summarize and translate text and create content, the company claimed.
At Tuesday's event, Baidu also showed off displayed generative AI-based products that could assist with traffic management, financial research and coal mine logistics.
It wasn't immediately clear to what extent those products were available for public use.
On Aug. 31, Baidu released its Ernie bot to the public, signaling government approval of the AI-powered chatbot. Other Chinese companies also released similar AI products around the same time.
, but initial access was limited to business partners and people who had to first join a waitlist.
said the "interim" rules would not apply to companies developing the AI tech as long as the product was not available to the mass public.
That's more relaxed than a that said forthcoming rules would apply even at the research stage.
ChatGPT, from -backed OpenAI, is not officially available in China, where and are blocked.