
Lights Out For AI: China's Chatbots Go Dark To Keep College Entrance Exam Fair
The Gaokao, running from June 7 to 10 this year, is given by over 13.4 million students who are vying for limited university spots in China.
China's artificial intelligence chatbots have temporarily hit the off switch on some key features, turning a little less smart for a very serious reason: preventing cheating during the massive Gaokao university entrance exams. Leading tech giants like Alibaba (with its Qwen bot), Tencent (Yuanbao), ByteDance (Doubao), and Moonshot (Kimi) are among those that have pulled the plug on their most popular AI tools' photo-recognition capabilities as authorities are making sure no student gets an unfair advantage during the high-stakes national tests.
The Gaokao, running from June 7 to 10 this year, is given by over 13.4 million students who are vying for limited university spots in China. China has earlier also gone all out with anti-cheating measures, from banning electronic devices to flying surveillance drones.
ByteDance's Doubao chatbot, a rival in the AI arena, reportedly still permits image uploads but refuses to answer any test-related queries, citing 'non-compliance with rules." Meanwhile, Alibaba's Qwen bot also reportedly refrains from analyzing test papers during exam hours.
This temporary suspension aligns with a broader regulatory framework for generative AI in education that the Chinese Ministry of Education previously released. The guidelines specifically prohibit students from independently utilizing artificial intelligence tools that generate open-ended content within primary and secondary school systems. Instead, educators are encouraged to integrate AI as a supplementary tool to studies, rather than a replacement for human-led instruction.
First Published:
June 10, 2025, 21:33 IST

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