Alibaba Group Holding’s cloud computing unit is offering an
artificial intelligence (AI)-infused platform to support the broadcasting of the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris, taking over a satellite broadcasting adopted six decades ago as the main method of distribution.
Alibaba Cloud and the Olympic Broadcasting Services (OBS) launched OBS Cloud 3.0 to help media outlets to get images and videos of the Games, Alibaba said in a statement on Thursday. OBS is a subsidiary of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), the organiser of the Paris Games, which oversees the distribution of event coverage. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post.
This marks “the first time in the history of the Olympic Games” that a cloud platform is the main method of content distribution, taking over from satellite which was launched during the Olympics Games Tokyo 1964”, Alibaba said in a statement.
This year’s Games are the first since Microsoft-backed OpenAI debuted its groundbreaking conversational chatbot
ChatGPT at the end of 2022. The launch triggered a global AI gold rush, in which the Olympics organisers are now participating with the use of generative AI meant to improve viewer experience.
The Chinese
e-commerce powerhouse has previously said that its proprietary
Tongyi Qianwen large language models (LLMs) – the technology that underpins chatbots like ChatGPT – will be used to assist the official commentators during the Games.
SenseTime, a Chinese AI start-up, is also working with the China men’s national basketball team to offer AI-driven sport data analysis and advice on strategy during the competition.
US technology giants Intel and Google are among the US Big Tech firms bringing their AI-related technology to the event.
Chip giant
Intel collaborated with IOC to create AthleteGPT, a chatbot that is able to handle athlete inquiries and deliver on-demand information during athletes’ stay at the Olympic Village in Paris. Meanwhile, Google’s AI products and technology will be featured in a partnership with NBCUniversal, a broadcaster of the Games, through things such as 3D maps of venues and pulling up information about specific sports.
With the move to the cloud, the Games will also be available to viewers in ultra high definition for the first time, according to Alibaba.
The Hangzhou-based company’s partnership with OBS will transform the viewer experience at the Games while “turning technology innovation into practical applications”, said Selina Yuan, president of international business at Alibaba Cloud Intelligence.