
China's smart cities streets ahead, but same AI challenges apply the world over
Each night in the darkest hours, a fleet of drones patrols the eastern Chinese city of Nanjing, watching over potentially dodgy areas such as underground station exits and the riverside to deter any would-be criminals.
Advertisement
The nightly routine has been operating since last year, according to a report published in April by the city's police bureau, which detailed its use of
artificial intelligence to plan patrol routes.
According to the report, the AI puts a laser focus on patrolling Nanjing's blind spots – the areas generally ignored by human patrols.
The city's experience is part of China's efforts to scale up the use of AI in urban management, to better handle complex challenges brought by the massive scale of city life and rapid urbanisation.
The Chinese leadership has long viewed AI as a tool for transforming the economy and refining its governance, launching the
'smart cities' initiative and other programmes over the past decade.
Advertisement
Despite this rapid progress, analysts warned that China's AI governance faces challenges – including privacy protection and limited community involvement – that are mirrored in other parts of the world as governments race to adopt the technology.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Chinese woman, 50, marries son's Russian classmate, sparks viral attention, scepticism
A woman from southeastern China has gone viral after marrying her son's Russian classmate and announcing her pregnancy, sparking controversy and scepticism online. Advertisement The 50-year-old woman, known online as 'Sister Xin', is an e-commerce entrepreneur based in Guangzhou. Living in a suburban villa complete with a chef and driver, she shares her daily life with her foreign husband to an audience of over 13,000 followers on Douyin. Sister Xin divorced at 30 and raised her son and daughter on her own. Six years ago, her son Kaikai invited three foreign classmates over for a Lunar New Year dinner. Residing in a suburban villa with a chef and driver, she shares her daily experiences with her foreign husband to an audience of over 13,000 followers on Douyin. Photo: Douyin. Among them was Defu, a Russian student in an advanced year compared to Kaikai, who spoke fluent Chinese after spending several years in China. His exact age has not been disclosed.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
From Cambridge to Suzhou: a Chinese AI start-up's journey to unicorn status
In 2007, a Chinese PhD student at the University of Cambridge launched a start-up with a former classmate focused on using speech recognition technology to help foreigners learn Chinese. A year later, Yu Kai and his team returned to China, aiming to draw on the country's vast market and deep talent pool to propel their nascent company's development. Swapping Cambridge for Suzhou – a city in eastern China then more famous for its picturesque gardens and canals than its tech sector – may have seemed like an unconventional choice at the time, but it proved to be an inspired move. Yu's company, AI Speech, is now riding China's artificial intelligence boom as a leader in conversational AI. It has raised hundreds of millions of dollars over several funding rounds, with the Hurun Research Institute recognising the firm as an AI unicorn. Its technology powers voice activation software used by carmakers Mercedes-Benz and BYD, as well as smart home brands Midea and Haier. It also develops AI chips and smart office devices like microphones and speakers. Though the company's funding mostly comes from private investors and its own revenue, China's industrial policies have also played an important role in supporting AI Speech, according to Yu.


South China Morning Post
2 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Alibaba unveils new AI model for image creation, as open-source approach gains recognition
Alibaba Group Holding has launched a new artificial intelligence (AI) model, Qwen VLo, said to be capable of generating and editing images with a finesse akin to that of a human artist, intensifying the competition in multimodal models as the tech giant seeks to redefine itself as an AI leader. Released on Friday, Qwen VLo was a 'comprehensive upgrade' from previous models like QwenVL and Qwen2.5 VL, the company said. It could better understand input and create more precise images, accommodate open-ended instructions, and support multiple languages, including Chinese and English. A preview is now available on Qwen Chat. Qwen VLo also supports diverse input and output formats, offering increased flexibility for users and making it ideal for creating posters, illustrations, web banners, and social media covers. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post. The new model adds to the intense competition in China's AI landscape, as rivals such as ByteDance and SenseTime strive to introduce their own multimodal models designed to interpret various types of input data, including text, video, and audio. In contrast, traditional AI models only handle one type of input. 10:41 How Hangzhou's 'Six Little Dragons' built a new Chinese tech hub How Hangzhou's 'Six Little Dragons' built a new Chinese tech hub Alibaba has been doubling down on AI and cloud computing, as it moves to streamline its sprawling operations. In February, the company pledged to invest more than 380 billion yuan (US$52 billion) in AI infrastructure over the next three years.