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Thousands of Companies Are Driving China’s AI Boom. A Government Registry Tracks Them All

January 20, 2026
in News
Thousands of Companies Are Driving China’s AI Boom. A Government Registry Tracks Them All

When DeepSeek burst onto the global stage in January 2025, it seemed to appear out of nowhere. But the large language model was just one of the thousands of generative AI tools that have been released in China since 2023—and there’s a public archive of every single one of them.

The China Issue

Here are 23 ways China is rewiring the future.

The country’s top internet regulator, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), requires that any company launching an AI tool with “public opinion properties or social mobilization capabilities” first file it in a public database: the algorithm registry. In a submission, developers must show how their products avoid 31 categories of risk, from age and gender discrimination to psychological harm to “violating core socialist values.”

Applicants submit their filing to their local CAC (say, the Shanghai CAC for Shanghai-registered firms), which forwards applications to the central CAC for final approval. Only then is a tool publicly listed in the algorithm registry. While the European Union is pursuing a single, comprehensive AI Act, notes Matt Sheehan, a research scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, China’s approach to regulation is more ad hoc, targeting specific algorithms and building up iterative standards. (The US has no comparable registration system or centralized regulatory agency.)

Over time, the CAC has inadvertently created the most detailed map of a nation’s AI ecosystem anywhere in the world.

Open the CAC’s update from August 2024 and you’ll find DeepSeek listed as entry 152, a single row in a neatly packed table. Scroll through the table and you’ll find an AI that manages homestays and an AI that drafts patents. One assists ob-gyns in a Shanghai maternity ward; another helps manage state power grids. Kendra Schaefer and her colleagues at Trivium China, a Beijing-based policy consultancy, have been compiling the CAC’s updates into a comprehensive database, enriched with their own research.

A Broad View of the Boom

Nearly 80 percent of China’s generative AI registrations are clustered in and around its top tech hubs—Beijing, Shenzhen, Shanghai, and Hangzhou. Each city has its strengths: Beijing’s elite universities, national labs, and political strength give it an edge in large-scale innovation; Shenzhen (in Guangdong) is home to a dense hardware supply chain and vast pool of engineering talent; Shanghai, close to multinationals, excels at commercialization; and Hangzhou (in Zhejiang) is fueled by Alibaba’s ecommerce empire.

But innovation spreads far beyond the coasts. Chongqing is positioning itself as an AI manufacturing and logistics node; and heavy state investment has helped Hefei, in Anhui Province, become known as “China’s speech valley” for its cluster of speech-recognition firms, including iFlyTek. Filings also originate in less obvious regions like Guizhou, China’s “Big Data Valley,” where massive data centers power Huawei’s Pangu model, and Inner Mongolia, where state enterprises are integrating AI into mining and agriculture.

In the Trivium dataset, state-linked listings—from state-owned enterprises to government-backed research institutes—make up 22 percent of filings. Many state-linked firms partner with Big Tech to build their AI: PetroChina, for example, teamed up with Huawei and iFlyTek to create oil and gas applications; State Grid used DeepSeek to build a model optimizing power grids.

Foreign firms make up just 0.5 percent of filings. Ikea, for example, has a smart shopper algorithm that generates product recommendations. Yum China, the parent company that operates Kentucky Fried Chicken in China, listed a model that generates menus and promotional material.

Zeroing In on the Competition

More than half of the listings in the algorithm registry are for what Schaefer calls cross-sector technologies. These range from foundational models to “general purpose” text generators to a wide array of multimedia tools—voice swappers, 3D renderers, image makers. “Nobody wants to be caught in a situation where they depend on a competitor’s technology,” Schaefer says. Unlike in the US, where OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google DeepMind dominate the market, China’s competition to build foundational AI remains diverse and contested. But building these models is costly, and the market is beginning to consolidate. China’s six “AI tigers”—Moonshot, Minimax, Zhipu, Baichuan, 0.1AI, and Stepfun—are all backed by Alibaba or Tencent. ByteDance’s Doubao surpassed DeepSeek as China’s most popular chatbot, but its spot at the top is not assured.

Niche Natives

While the giants duke it out for chatbot supremacy, startups are hard at work in every sector imaginable.

Squirrel AI 松鼠

Founder Derek Li says his 12-year-old company is leaps beyond the ed-tech competition. They “put wheels on a horse,” he says, bolting AI onto their existing stale software. Squirrel claims to diagnose knowledge gaps, measure progress, and adjust lessons in real time.

When China banned for-profit tutoring in 2021, the company’s revenues collapsed overnight. It pivoted to licensing its platform to franchisees who also sold the company’s AI-powered tablets. Squirrel’s network includes more than 3,000 centers across China, serving 1.2 million students. Now, the company is eyeing expansion to the US.

Li, who withdrew his sons from a private school in Shanghai so that they could be home-schooled on Squirrel’s platform, says that “in the future, teachers won’t teach knowledge.” Instead, he says, “they’ll become data analysts, understanding learning reports and students’ ability, and psychologists, understanding emotions and shaping their personalities.”

AI Kanshe 看舌

AI Kanshe (translated as “AI Sees Tongue”) is a traditional Chinese medicine startup that analyzes health through images of the tongue, palms, and face. The company was founded by Li Wenhua, a former employee of Yaoshi Bang, one of China’s earliest online pharmaceutical platforms. A longtime student of tongue and hand diagnosis, Li wanted to combine the diagnostic methods of traditional Chinese medicine with modern machine vision. The company serves both consumers and health practitioners across clinics, pharmacies, and some hospitals, offering tools to support diagnosis and decisionmaking. Its model is trained on more than 100,000 annotated images of tongues, hands, and faces.

Zhongtan Puhui Cloud Technology 中碳普惠云科技

Founded in 2024 by Wu Song, a former Wall Street quant trader, Zhongtan Puhui Cloud Technology develops AI-driven tools for carbon accounting. The green transition, Wu says, still relies on cumbersome human labor that could be automated.

Zhongtan Puhui builds AI agents that handle a number of carbon accounting tasks, including carbon footprinting and emissions audits. Its clients range from China Minmetals Group and DHL to small and medium-sized exporters in the Yangtze River Delta.

According to the company, its AI agents can pull real-time data directly from power plants, allowing them to complete a task that once took up to 30 days in 15 minutes—for a tenth of the price.

Zhongtan Puhui plans to expand into European countries. It has recently added English, French, Portuguese, and German versions and plans to sell the product on Amazon Cloud and Microsoft Azure.

UBtech 优必选科技

Inspired after seeing Honda’s Asimo robot at a tech fair in Japan, Zhou Jian founded UBtech in 2012. He spent six years perfecting the robot’s servo actuators—the “joints” that enable movement—before unveiling the company’s first robot, Alpha. In 2023, UBtech became the first humanoid company to list on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

Based in Shenzhen, the company now produces robots for factories, schools, health care facilities, and homes. Its flagship Walker S series, designed for industrial and logistics work, is used by automakers like BYD and Zeekr; its Jimu and uKIT robotics kits teach students coding and AI; Alpha Mini, its child-friendly humanoid, is in nursery schools in Seoul. The company also develops robots for elder care and companionship, as well as consumer devices like smart vacuums and lawn mowers.

UBtech retrains existing foundational models, first through simulated environments, then in mock factory environments, before deployment in real production lines. The company currently sells to more than 40 countries, with roughly a third of its revenue coming from overseas markets.

XVerse 元象

XVerse is building lifelike virtual worlds for entertainment. The company was founded by former Tencent vice president Yao Xing. After leading Tencent to develop a Go-playing AI, Yao concluded that AGI progresses fastest when its goals are clear and measurable—as in the game of Go—but that most real-world challenges are open-ended. So in 2020, he left Tencent to found XVerse, aiming to build complex, simulated worlds where AI could learn, act, and evolve.

In 2024, the company launched its flagship product, Saylo, which turns chat conversations into immersive AI-driven story videos. Users create personalized virtual characters and explore branching plots in real time. The app has 20 million users worldwide. The company also built its own large-language model, XVerse MoE, trained on diverse data sources including news, code, literature, and academic papers.

The company is also developing an AI-driven game, Zhaoyang Legend, set in a fantasy realm where players must ascend to the throne as a young crown prince and manage a kingdom. The game evolves dynamically based on players’ decisions, creating endless possible plots and endings.

Haivivi 跃然创新

BubblePal, a golf-ball-sized orb, transforms children’s toys into chatty companions. Clip it onto a stuffed Peppa Pig and the toy will talk back in Peppa’s voice. The device can switch between more than 40 personalities, from Disney’s Buzz Lightyear to the Monkey King, and speak in multiple languages and dialects, including French, German, Cantonese, and Sichuanese. A companion app lets parents set learning goals, such as encouraging more English conversation, and track weekly “growth reports” that analyze a child’s conversations, emotions, and interests. Since its launch last summer, more than 300,000 units have been sold.

The toy is made by Haivivi, a Chinese company founded in 2021 by Li Yong, a former Alibaba executive who helped develop the company’s smart speaker. Realizing that many of the smart speaker’s users were children, Li decided to make children’s toys, and in 2023 pivoted to AI companions. He relocated from Beijing to Shenzhen to tap into the city’s electronics supply chain.

According to the company, its models undergo strict data reviews and monitoring to prevent inappropriate speech. In addition to going through the rigorous algorithm registry vetting process, it follows the CAC rules for protecting minors’ data. BubblePal is also available in the US, Canada, and the UK, with plans for further expansion. Haivivi aims to add more popular characters such as Lucky Cat and develop product lines for young adults, like AI-powered tarot cards.

What the Registry Doesn’t Show: Chinese AI Is Going Global

In recent years, the term chuhai—“to go overseas”—has become a buzzword as Chinese firms look abroad to escape slowing consumption and weak capital markets back home. China produces about a quarter of the world’s top 100 AI products by revenue, and most of them target overseas markets. A top earner for the Hangzhou company Glority, for example, is a plant-identification app called PictureThis, which is popular outside China.

To avoid geopolitical trip wires, some Chinese tech companies have been distancing themselves from their roots by hiring foreign staff, setting up headquarters in Singapore or California, or leaving China altogether. A company called Butterfly Effect, for example, was founded in China and built a general-purpose AI agent called Manus. Shortly after the US established export controls on Nvidia chips, the company relocated to Singapore, laid off most of its Chinese staff, and scrubbed all of its content from Chinese social media.

Butterfly Effect’s ambiguous identity raises a deeper question: What does it mean to be a “Chinese” AI company?


What Say You? Let us know what you think about this article in the comments below. Alternatively, you can submit a letter to the editor at [email protected].

The post Thousands of Companies Are Driving China’s AI Boom. A Government Registry Tracks Them All appeared first on Wired.

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