China’s Baidu unveils AI-driven Wikipedia challenger in bid for international users



Chinese tech giant Baidu launched a Wikipedia challenger this week, banking on artificial intelligence to bridge information gaps for local and worldwide audiences in a move analysts said was aimed at seizing global opportunities.

BaiduWiki, a Wikipedia-style service available in English, Spanish, French, Russian and Japanese, quietly went live on Monday, according to records from the Wayback Machine, a digital archive platform.

A now deleted post on Baidu’s official account on social-media site X described BaiduWiki as an international version of the Baidu Baike online encyclopaedia and said it currently hosted 1 million entries across the languages, which had been translated with the help of multiple AI agents.

Baidu launched Baidu Baike in 2008, building it into one of the largest such services, with more than 30 million entries as of January.

On Wednesday, the company also introduced a new “global search” feature for its Ernie Assistant, giving the chatbot’s more than 200 million monthly active users immediate access to information including global destinations and scenic spots, Baidu said in a statement.

Pulling in overseas information for local users while doing the opposite for a global audience marks a strategic move to use AI and Ernie Assistant to bridge global information gaps, said Zhang Yi, founder and chief analyst at internet market consultancy iiMedia.

  • Related Posts

    Hong Kong stocks slip as Beijing regulator summons tech firms on train-ticket complaints

    Hong Kong stocks fell on Thursday after Beijing’s market regulator summoned major online platforms for talks over irregularities in the online sale of train tickets ahead of Lunar New Year,…

    Continue reading
    AmCham chairman’s 2026 wishes? More US-China talks, fewer tariffs, no shocks

    In January, James Zimmerman returned to the American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham China) as its chairman. He previously served in that role for four one-year terms in 2007,…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *