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Alibaba develops AI tool capable of writing 20,000 lines of ad copy per second
Date: 12.07.2018

Alibaba develops AI tool capable of writing 20,000 lines of ad copy per second

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba has developed an AI tool (artificial intelligence) capable of producing 20,000 lines of content per second.


Created as part of Alibaba’s digital marking unit Alimama, the tool aims to reduce the heavy and arduous workload of producing copy for product listings by retailers, working by scraping ‘millions of existing human writing samples from the company’s e-commerce platforms which it interprets using deep-learning models and natural language processing (NLP technologies).


According to Alibaba, the AI tool has passed the Turing Test where a machine is analysed for its ability to imitate a human without detection and is already being used ‘millions of times day’ by retailers on its properties including Tmall, Mel.com, 1699.com and Taobao.


Global fashion brand Esprit and Dickies are two such retailers already using the tool, which can be accessed by selecting an option to ‘Produce Smart Copy’, allowing them to choose from samples of varying tones including ‘promotional, functional, fun, poetic, or heartwarming’


Concerns for copywriters?


While the release of Alibaba’s AI tool will be welcome news for retailers, it may result in some sweaty palms among copywriters. However, the company has emphasized its stance that the product has been designed to complement, rather than replace, the work done by human marketers.


‘For merchants, from today onwards, AI can take care of a portion of their copywritng needs. And it significantly changes the way they work: They will shift from thinking up copy – one line at a time – to choosing the best out of many machine-generated options, largely improving efficiency,’ read a statement by Alimama.


Meanwhile, the group’s general manager, Christina Lu, added, ‘AI system will never be able to replace human creativity – but can enable people to focus their major energies towards richly-creative work, and the machines can take over the repetitive, low-value work involved in writing.’


Despite the assurances, however, Alibaba’s announcement forms part of a wider, if slightly alarming trend. In May this year, Google published research of a new algorithm that would be able to generate original and ‘coherent’ articles based on content from multiple web pages to answer a specific question for a user, without the need to direct them to another site.


Meanwhile, news agency Recters has taken a ‘gamble’ on its very industry in building Lynx Insight, an AI tool geared at helping journalists interpret data, suggest ideas for stories, and in some cases, even write sentences.