Sony to Expand Chinese Game Incubator in Microsoft Head-to-Head 

Visitors walk past a logo of Sony at Sony Building in Tokyo, July 31, 2014. (AP)
Visitors walk past a logo of Sony at Sony Building in Tokyo, July 31, 2014. (AP)
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Sony to Expand Chinese Game Incubator in Microsoft Head-to-Head 

Visitors walk past a logo of Sony at Sony Building in Tokyo, July 31, 2014. (AP)
Visitors walk past a logo of Sony at Sony Building in Tokyo, July 31, 2014. (AP)

Sony Group Corp said on Tuesday it plans to expand a program to identify and incubate Chinese-made games, in a race with Microsoft Corp to tap China's gaming market. 

The program will invest more than 1 million yuan ($140,080) in each game it enrolls, and will not only fund small teams but also big teams with dozens of engineers or more, Bao Bo, Sony's director of China game production, said. 

The Japanese tech giant's plans were made public during an event live-streamed from the southwestern Chinese city of Chengdu to re-launch the China Hero Project program, which ground to a halt due to COVID-19. 

"The scale of the third season will far exceed the previous two," Bao said, adding that Sony will publish some games and its PlayStation Studios will support enrolled projects. 

Sony said that it will be the publisher of Lost Soul Aside and Convallaria, two games enrolled in the previous two seasons. 

The China Hero Project unveiled its first two batches of games in 2017 and 2019 and has supported 17 titles, of which seven have reached the market. 

It was part of Sony's years-long approach to China, which ultimately led it to a lucrative exclusivity deal with the Chinese hit game "Genshin Impact" outside of the China Hero Project. Little known before its 2019 launch, it became of the world's most profitable games. 

Reuters reported last month that Sony's success with "Genshin Impact" has driven Microsoft to aggressively woo Chinese game developers with big licensing deals. 

Sony sells the PlayStation (PS) consoles in China, where people have traditionally preferred playing mobile-based games. 

It has sold more than 3.5 million PS4 consoles in China and Jim Ryan, CEO of Sony's gaming-focused subsidiary Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE), said it had sold about 670,000 units of PS5 there since its Chinese launch in May 2021. Tatsuo Eguchi, president of SIE Shanghai, said that Sony's goal is to sell twice as many PS5 consoles as it had for the PS4 and believed the China Hero Project could help meet this goal. 

"We want gamers around the world to better understand the creativity that comes from China. I have always had a dream which is for console gaming to become a regular part of daily entertainment for Chinese people," he said. 



OpenAI, Anthropic Sign Deals with US Govt for AI Research and Testing

OpenAI logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. (Reuters)
OpenAI logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. (Reuters)
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OpenAI, Anthropic Sign Deals with US Govt for AI Research and Testing

OpenAI logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. (Reuters)
OpenAI logo is seen in this illustration taken May 20, 2024. (Reuters)

AI startups OpenAI and Anthropic have signed deals with the United States government for research, testing and evaluation of their artificial intelligence models, the US Artificial Intelligence Safety Institute said on Thursday.

The first-of-their-kind agreements come at a time when the companies are facing regulatory scrutiny over safe and ethical use of AI technologies.

California legislators are set to vote on a bill as soon as this week to broadly regulate how AI is developed and deployed in the state.

Under the deals, the US AI Safety Institute will have access to major new models from both OpenAI and Anthropic prior to and following their public release.

The agreements will also enable collaborative research to evaluate capabilities of the AI models and risks associated with them, Reuters reported.

"We believe the institute has a critical role to play in defining US leadership in responsibly developing artificial intelligence and hope that our work together offers a framework that the rest of the world can build on," said Jason Kwon, chief strategy officer at ChatGPT maker OpenAI.

Anthropic, which is backed by Amazon and Alphabet , did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

"These agreements are just the start, but they are an important milestone as we work to help responsibly steward the future of AI," said Elizabeth Kelly, director of the US AI Safety Institute.

The institute, a part of the US commerce department's National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), will also collaborate with the U.K. AI Safety Institute and provide feedback to the companies on potential safety improvements.

The US AI Safety Institute was launched last year as part of an executive order by President Joe Biden's administration to evaluate known and emerging risks of artificial intelligence models.