AI unicorn SenseTime appoints Three-Body Problem author Liu Cixin as director of ‘immersive’ sci-fi research project

July 20, 2021

AI unicorn SenseTime appoints Three-Body Problem author Liu Cixin as director of ‘immersive’ sci-fi research project

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China’s most famous sci-fi writer Liu Cixin, author of The Three-Body Problem, is joining one of the country’s largest artificial intelligence (AI) companies, SenseTime Group, as director of its Science Fiction Planet Research Center.

SenseTime announced Liu’s new role at the 2021 World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai on Friday. The author of China’s epic trilogy, which kicked off the current phase of sci-fi fever in the country, teased audiences at the event by saying he was collaborating with SenseTime on building “an immersive world which welcomes everyone to experience the vastness of the universe, the insignificance of human beings, and the infinite possibilities in the future”.

“AI is an accelerator of the imagination which can promote the development of science and technology, ultimately leading to the advancement of humanity,” said Liu.

SenseTime, whose AI technology is used to scan faces in streets, subways and residential complexes across cities in China, first announced its new sci-fi venture in May.

The company is working on what it describes as an “innovative and immersive offline entertainment experience” with the copyright holder of Liu’s book, Three Body Universe (Shanghai) Cultural Development Co, a subsidiary of Yoozoo Group.

SenseTime has yet to reveal details of the project but said it aims to use its AI technology to help users experience the Three-Body Problem and even “interact” with the characters from the trilogy.

Liu’s Hugo Award-winning work has become a prized piece of intellectual property after China’s relatively new embrace of science fiction entertainment. One of his novels, The Wandering Earth, was adapted into a big-screen blockbuster in 2019, earning US$700 at the box office.

Officially named Remembrance of Earth’s Past, Liu’s trilogy is also set for a much-hyped Netflix adaptation. The project, announced in 2019, will reportedly involve HBO’s Game of Thrones co-creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss.

But adapting the sci-fi story, which describes an alien invasion through a surprising mix of cultural theory and astrophysics, has been besieged by problems, including a high-profile murder case.

Millennial gaming billionaire Lin Qi, the founder and chief executive of Yoozoo Games which licensed the book rights to Netflix, was poisoned and subsequently declared dead on Christmas Day last year.

Yoozoo also initially promised to invest 1.2 billion yuan (US$185 million) into six films based on The Three-Body Problem after it obtained film, TV and game rights, but the project never took off.

The Netflix adaptation ran into its own problems after Liu Cixin gave an interview to The New Yorker in 2019 expressing support for the Chinese government’s treatment of Xinjiang’s Uygur Muslim community. In late 2020, a group of five Republican US senators called for Netflix to abandon the project but the streaming service said that it intends to move ahead with the production.

SenseTime, which traces its roots to Hong Kong and became the city’s first high tech unicorn, has been caught up in its own controversy over Beijing’s policies in Xinjiang. Along with other Chinese facial recognition start-ups, the Hong Kong and Shanghai-headquartered company was added to a US trade blacklist in 2019, implicating it in human rights violations against Uygurs and other members of Muslim minority groups in the far-west region of the country.

Beijing denies the allegations of human rights abuses in the region.

Despite these challenges, SenseTime contemplated an initial public offering after seeing a surge in demand for its technology thanks to the Covid-19 pandemic, Bloomberg reported in August last year.

Besides the Three-Body Problem venture, the AI company announced other projects at WAIC this year, including augmented reality (AR), sensing technology for smart vehicles, and an algorithm and computing infrastructure project called SenseCore AI Infrastructure.

The firm’s backers include SoftBank Group Corp, Temasek Holdings and Alibaba Group Holding. Alibaba is the parent company of the South China Morning Post.

The Three-Body Problem by Cixin Liu Has Become a Serialized Podcast

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In Cixin’s Liu’s The Three-Body Problem, the first in his Remembrance of Earth’s Past series of novels, the truth about the existence of sentient life beyond Earth looms large in the minds of a number of different characters who all have varying takes on what to do about the aliens.

But in addition to being a story about humanity’s response to other intelligent life in the present day, The Three-Body Problem is also striking reflection on how living through a period like the Chinese Cultural Revolution profoundly altered and devastated many people’s sense of reality. Using the Cultural Revolution’s violent sociopolitical upheavals as its backstrop, The Three-Body Problem explores the various ways that people survive and emerge from revolutions. While Liu’s prose and its excellent translation by Ken Liu are immersive, the book takes on a different kind of energy in Macmillan’s new audiobook production narrated by Luke Daniels.

Though the original audiobook’s been available for purchase and at libraries for some time now, Tor Books and Macmillan Audio have partnered to release The Three-Body Problem as an ongoing serialized podcast released on Macmillan’s Stories From Among the Stars feed.

Over the next few weeks leading up to August 6, Stories From the Stars’ feed will share new chapters from The Three-Body Problem every Tuesday and Thursday, after which the entire book will be available until September 10. Given The-Three Body Problem’s density, sitting down to read or listen to it in a single sitting might not be everyone’s speed, and there is something about the book being served up on a podcast platform that lends itself to consuming it as “episodic” content. The book-as-a-podcast move definitely feels influenced by Netflix’s upcoming adaptation of The Three-Body Problem, but this is the sort of trend that honestly would be very interesting to see more of from major publishers.

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