Advertisement

Chinese short video giant Kuaishou launches AI system that creates virtual idols for corporate customers

  • StreamLake is the first enterprise-facing product from Kuaishou, which has never turned a profit but hopes to break even this year
  • Since going public in Hong Kong last year, the short video platform operator has faced mounting regulatory pressure and a plummeting stock price

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
The logo of Chinese video-sharing company Kuaishou at its offices in Hangzhou, in China’s eastern Zhejiang province. Photo: AFP
Kuaishou Technology, operator of China’s second-largest short video app, on Wednesday unveiled a new artificial intelligence-powered video creation and distribution tool for corporate clients as it seeks new sources of revenue outside its loss-making consumer-focused business.
Advertisement

StreamLake is the first enterprise-facing product from Kuaishou, which reported 6.25 billion yuan (US$925.3 million) in losses in the first quarter, as the company pivots after struggling to turn the attention of its 350 million daily active users into profit.

Defined as a “one-stop AI solution to audio and video”, StreamLake is designed to help businesses generate and promote videos. The new service is able to integrate special effects, enhance resolution, store and manage multimedia files, smooth live-streaming sessions and analyse data, according to its website.

The system can even analyse faces and movements to build virtual characters that can speak, perform and interact with audiences during live-streaming sessions. The feature could potentially save merchants money in their efforts to woo consumers through live streaming and short videos.

Chen Dingjia, Kuaishou’s chief technology officer, said the company has “accumulated years of technical capabilities of assembling and distributing content into a set of scalable product systems and services”. Kuaishou said it started building StreamLake in 2020, and it has already served companies including smartphone maker Xiaomi and telecoms operator China Unicom.

StreamLake also has a partnership with graphics card developer Nvidia to open the platform to third-party developers, start-ups and other partners, the company said.

Advertisement
Hong Kong-listed Kuaishou closed down 3.6 per cent on Wednesday to HK$74, less than a fifth of its HK$400 peak in early 2021. Founded as a GIF-sharing platform in 2011, Kuaishou has never turned a profit. After facing increasing regulatory pressures at home and a tech stock sell-off since going public last year, the company hopes to at least break even in its earnings this year while expanding beyond short video content.
Advertisement