Rapid adoption of AI in China, the largest testing ground, could shape how it is used globally

Applications of AI


On a recent weekday, about 50 people gathered outside the headquarters of a Chinese mobile internet company, waiting for help installing an artificial intelligence assistant.

The scene was repeated at several events over several days in the Chinese capital, Beijing, and in March in the southern tech hub of Shenzhen, engineers were seen helping crowds set up the popular AI “agent” OpenClaw on their laptops.

“I’m worried that we will fall behind in technological development,” said Sun Lei, 41, a human resources manager at Cheetah Events. She said she hopes the tool will help obtain and screen resumes on various recruiting platforms.

More than a year after OpenAI’s Chinese rival DeepSeek wowed the world with its advanced AI models, China has become a testing ground for the mass use of AI tools. While AI models built in the U.S. still dominate in raw computing power, people and businesses in China are rapidly embracing the technology, facilitating rapid and widespread adoption in nearly every possible field.

With the adoption of AI in the workplace and daily life at a rapid pace around the world, ordinary Chinese people are using it for everything from booking and planning trips to ordering food and hailing rides. According to a report by the government-run China Internet Network Information Center, more than 600 million people out of a population of 1.4 billion were using generative AI as of December, an increase of 142% from the previous year.

There has also been a recent surge in the use of “agent” AI like OpenClaw, including by many Chinese companies, and data consumption by AI models has also increased. According to OpenRouter, an AI “gateway platform” that tracks data and enforces security between different AI models, the weekly share used by Chinese AI models recently surpassed that of U.S. models, as measured by what computer scientists call tokens, or units of data such as parts of words.