Chinese TV employs Microsoft’s AI tech as weather reporter; anchors worried

XiaoIce is the Chinese version of Cortana developed by Microsoft.

Update: 2015-12-24 20:52 GMT
A Chinese news channel has employed an Microsoft's artificial intelligence Cortana as a weather reporter on its show (Representational Image)

Beijing: For the first time, a Chinese news channel has employed an artificial intelligence robot as a weather reporter on its live breakfast show, raising concerns among the country's journalists as it could threaten their jobs.

"I'm happy to start my new work on the winter solstice," robot XiaoIce said during her debut on Tuesday morning. XiaoIce is actually a piece of software developed by Microsoft using smart cloud and big data.

In the first two days of her work, XiaoIce impressed many with her cute voice. She also comments on big news events on Shanghai Dragon TV.

According to Microsoft, breakthroughs in text-to-speech artificial intelligence (AI) have helped XiaoIce score highpoints for linguistic naturalness, and hers is closer to the human voice than other speech synthesizers.

Through unique emotional technology, she can make comments instantly based on weather data.

After her successful debut, people are worried that XiaoIce could cause traditional TV anchors and weather reporters to lose their jobs, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.

Song Jiongming, director of TV news for the Shanghai Media Group, pointed out that human anchors will not be completely replaced by XiaoIce in the near term, but the robot will supplement humans with her big data analysis capability.

In September this year, Chinese social and gaming giant Tencent published its first business report written by a robot this week, stroking fears among local journalists as it could make forays into the state controlled media in China and oust them from work.

The "flawless" 916-word article was released via the company's QQ.com portal, an instant messaging service that wields much sway in China.

"The piece is very readable. I can't even tell it wasn't written by a person," Li Wei, a Reporter based in the Chinese manufacturing boomtown of Shenzhen told Hong Kong media.

It was written in Chinese and completed in just one minute by Dream writer, a Tencent-designed robot journalist that apparently has few problems covering basic financial news.

Robot reporters could easily replace a lot of Chinese reporters like this nationwide, a Chinese journalist based in Guangzhou said.

 

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