In the midst of a radical internal restructuring, Alibaba unveiled its latest secret weapon in the AI race on Tuesday: Wukong.

Named after the legendary Monkey King, the platform marks the transition from simple chatbots to proactive "agentic AI" systems for businesses. Alibaba is thereby responding to the massive "OpenClaw" hype currently sweeping China's tech sector.

Wukong: the proactive digital employee

Unlike conventional AI tools that merely answer questions, Wukong can independently execute tasks in enterprise systems.

Restructuring & unrest: the dark sides of the AI boom

The unveiling of Wukong comes at a critical time for Alibaba. One day earlier, the group announced the founding of Alibaba Token Hub (ATH), which consolidates all AI activities under the leadership of CEO Eddie Wu.

  1. Personnel exodus: The team behind the successful AI model Qwen has seen prominent departures. Chief developer Lin Junyang left the company in March, followed by the heads of post-training and coding.

  2. Financial pressure: Alibaba faces the release of its quarterly numbers on Thursday. After investments of over $53 billion in AI, investors expect clear evidence of monetization.

Experts see Wukong and OpenClaw as the beginning of the "AGI inflection point." AI no longer just "chats," it "acts" (VLA - Vision-Language-Action).

While the US leads in basic technologies, China is developing into the world's largest testing ground for the practical application of these AI agents in everyday work.

All details & data: Scientific American, SCMP, Bloomberg

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