Latest news with #Youxuan


Mint
11 hours ago
- Business
- Mint
‘DeepSeek moment' in AI vs humans: Artificial intelligence influencers outperform human rivals in livestream sales
Artificial intelligence (AI) avatars are now selling more than real people. A live stream hosted by Chinese tech firm Baidu and popular live streamer Luo Yonghao confirms this. On Baidu's platform, Youxuan, Luo and his co-host Xiao Mu used digital versions of themselves to livestream for over six hours. Their AI avatars helped them earn 55 million yuan (about $7.65 million), CNBC reported. This was much more than Luo's earlier livestream using his real self. The earlier stream lasted four hours and made fewer sales. Luo admitted it was his first time using virtual human technology. 'The digital human effect has scared me ... I'm a bit dazed,' CNBC quoted him as saying. Luo became famous through livestreaming on Douyin (China's TikTok). He has over 24 million followers. He started selling online in 2020 to pay off debts from his failed phone company. The avatars were built using Baidu's AI model, which was trained on five years of videos and copied Luo's humour and style. China's livestreaming and digital avatar industry is growing fast. AI company DeepSeek is gaining attention for creating technology like ChatGPT, but at a lower cost. DeepSeek uses open-source tools and is backed by Chinese tech giant Baidu. AI-powered digital avatars are helping companies save money. They can livestream nonstop, without needing breaks or big production teams. Earlier, companies like Baidu were unsure about using digital humans. But, today, their technology has improved greatly. Since the pandemic, livestream shopping has become popular in China as people looked for new ways to earn money. Livestreamers now earn through commissions and digital gifts. The trend is so strong that Douyin became the second-biggest online shopping platform in China. It has overtaken and competing with market leader Alibaba. 'This is a DeepSeek moment for China's entire livestreaming and digital human industry,' Wu Jialu told CNBC. Wu is the head of research at Be Friends Holding, another company owned by Luo. Neuro-sama, an AI streamer, is gaining popularity on Amazon's platform Twitch. She appears as an anime girl who chats, sings and plays games like Minecraft. Her replies come from a chatbot similar to ChatGPT. Her creator, Vedal, built her using the Unity game engine and works on this project full-time, according to Bloomberg. Despite being an AI avatar, Neuro-sama has become a hit. Around 5,700 viewers watch her streams regularly, making her one of Twitch's top streamers.


CNBC
a day ago
- Business
- CNBC
AI humans in China just proved they are better influencers. It only took a duo 7 hours to rake in more than $7 million
BEIJING — Avatars generated by artificial intelligence are now able to sell more than real people can, according to a collaboration between Chinese tech company Baidu and a popular livestreamer. Luo Yonghao, one of China's earliest and most popular livestreamers, and his co-host Xiao Mu both used digital versions of themselves to interact with viewers in real time for well over six hours on Sunday on Baidu's e-commerce livestreaming platform "Youxuan", the Chinese tech company said. The session raked in 55 million yuan ($7.65 million). In comparison, Luo's first livestream attempt on Youxuan last month, which lasted just over four hours, saw fewer orders for consumer electronics, food and other key products, Baidu said. Luo said that it was his first time using virtual human technology to sell products through livestreaming. "The digital human effect has scared me ... I'm a bit dazed," he told his 1.7 million followers on social media platform Weibo, according to a CNBC translation. Luo started livestreaming in April 2020 on ByteDance's short video app Douyin, in an attempt to pay off debts racked up by his struggling smartphone company Smartisan. His "Be Friends" Douyin livestream account has nearly 24.7 million followers. Luo's and his co-host's avatars were built using Baidu's generative AI model, which learned from five years' worth of videos to mimic their jokes and style, Wu Jialu, head of research at Luo's other company, Be Friends Holding, told CNBC on Wednesday. "This is a DeepSeek moment for China's entire livestreaming and digital human industry," Wu said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC. DeepSeek, China's version of OpenAI, rattled global investors in January with its claims of rivaling ChatGPT at far lower costs and using an open-source approach. AI avatars can sharply reduce costs since companies don't need to hire a large production team or a studio to livestream. The digital avatars can also stream nonstop without needing breaks. "We have always been skeptical about digital people livestreaming," Wu said, noting the company had tried out various kinds of digital humans over the years. But he said that Baidu now offers the best digital human product currently available, compared to the early days of livestreaming e-commerce five or six years ago. Livestream shopping took off in China after the pandemic forced businesses to find alternative sales channels. More people are turning to livestreaming to earn money from commissions and virtual gifts amid slower economic growth. Livestreaming generated so many sales on Douyin last year that the app surpassed traditional e-commerce company to become China's second-largest e-commerce platform — and ate into the market share of lead player Alibaba, according to a report from Worldpanel and Bain & Company last week. Both and Alibaba's Taobao also offer livestreaming sales portals. Meanwhile, other Chinese companies, including tech giant Tencent, have developed tools to create digital people that can be used as news anchors. In late 2023, several businesses started trying out virtual human livestreamers during the Singles Day shopping holiday. But analysts have cautioned that products sold via livestreams tend to have a high return rate as they are often impulse purchases. The biggest challenge for using virtual humans to livestream is no longer the technology, but compliance and platform requirements, Wu said. Digital humans need to be trained to adhere to regulations about product advertising, while major livestreaming platforms may have different rules about allowing virtual people to host the sessions, he said. For example, Douyin has rolled out restrictions on using the technology, especially if the virtual people do not interact with viewers. While Luo's next virtual human appearance hasn't been set yet, Wu said he expects it will be very soon. And in the future, he said, digital humans could easily livestream in multiple languages to reach users outside China.