--- title: "China’s Alibaba, ByteDance and Zhipu AI make the cut on Time’s first AI A-list" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/284560473.md" description: "Three Chinese companies, Alibaba, ByteDance, and Zhipu AI, have been recognized in Time magazine's inaugural AI A-list, highlighting their influence in the AI sector. Alibaba's open-source models have gained significant traction, while Zhipu AI has made headlines as the first Chinese large language model developer to go public. ByteDance has achieved mass adoption with its Doubao assistant. The list underscores the contrasting strategies between Chinese firms focusing on open models and US companies prioritizing integrated ecosystems, amidst a growing global competition in AI technology." datetime: "2026-04-29T11:32:22.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/284560473.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/284560473.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/284560473.md) --- # China’s Alibaba, ByteDance and Zhipu AI make the cut on Time’s first AI A-list Three Chinese companies – Alibaba Group Holding, ByteDance and Zhipu AI – have been named among Time magazine’s “10 Most Influential AI Companies of 2026”, marking the first time the publication has introduced an artificial intelligence-specific sub-list under its broader Time100 Most Influential Companies ranking. Of the remaining seven companies on the list, six are based in the US, while France’s Mistral AI is the only European representative. The launch of a dedicated AI ranking underscores how AI has moved beyond hype to become a defining force in the global economy, with far-reaching implications for technological development, productivity and infrastructure investment. US players including OpenAI, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms and Anthropic continue to dominate in scale, funding and deployment, with billions of dollars flowing into model development and computing infrastructure. Against that backdrop, the three Chinese firms have expanded rapidly through distinct strategies – Alibaba and Zhipu AI have emphasised open-source models to drive adoption, while ByteDance has focused on scaling consumer-facing applications. Time said Alibaba had emerged as a major global force in AI through its open-source push, with its Qwen family of models surpassing 1 billion downloads and gaining adoption among international companies including Airbnb. “In less than three years, Chinese tech giant Alibaba has become a dominant force in open-source AI,” the magazine said. Zhipu AI, meanwhile, has also gained attention for its open-source strategy. The Beijing-based company became the first Chinese large language model developer to go public, debuting on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange in January after raising US$558 million in an initial public offering. By February, it unveiled its GLM-5 model under an open-source licence. The model had outperformed rivals such as Google’s Gemini 3 Pro on some benchmarks and was approaching the capabilities of Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.5 and OpenAI’s GPT-5.2 in coding and agent tasks, according to Time. “Zhipu’s models already power more than 4 million enterprise users and developers from 218 countries and regions,” the magazine said. ByteDance has focused on consumer-scale adoption, pushing AI into the mainstream through its Doubao assistant, which reached 100 million daily active users during the Lunar New Year holiday – an early example of mass adoption at that scale. The list highlights a growing divergence in approach: Chinese firms have leaned towards open-weight models to drive adoption and reduce costs, while US companies have largely prioritised closed, vertically integrated ecosystems spanning models, cloud infrastructure and applications. Amazon, for example, is expanding its infrastructure footprint through Project Rainier, a 1,200-acre computing complex, while OpenAI’s valuation has climbed to about US$852 billion as it sharpens its focus on commercial products. The ranking also reflects intensifying competition between start-ups and established tech giants. While newer entrants such as Mistral are gaining traction by promoting openness and data sovereignty – particularly in Europe – the industry’s direction remains heavily influenced by a small group of dominant players. Platforms like Hugging Face have further amplified open ecosystems, acting as key hubs for distributing models, data sets and tools. The list comes as governments and corporations increasingly view AI as strategic infrastructure. From debates in Washington over military applications to Beijing’s push for technological self-sufficiency, the balance between openness and control is set to shape the next phase of global competition. Alibaba owns the South China Morning Post. Last month, the company established the Alibaba Token Hub Business Group, which brings all its core AI teams and products together under one umbrella. ### Related Stocks - [BABA.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BABA.US.md) - [02513.HK](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/02513.HK.md) - [KBAB.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/KBAB.US.md) - [BABO.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BABO.US.md) - [BABX.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BABX.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [ByteDance, Zhipu AI, and Alibaba named to TIME’s top 10 most influential AI companies of 2026](https://longbridge.com/en/news/284322360.md) - [Alipay launches AI payment processing tool for businesses as agent-based commerce Expands](https://longbridge.com/en/news/284355433.md) - [Lattice Wins BIG 2026 AI Excellence Award | LSCC Stock News](https://longbridge.com/en/news/284633967.md) - [PTOP's AI Partner Tier 1 AI, Signs Contract With OTCQX:PETV as Enterprise Client | PETV Stock News](https://longbridge.com/en/news/284597250.md) - [ZAWYA: I Am Sophia: MOBH Holding Group introduces the region’s first Agentic AI](https://longbridge.com/en/news/284561029.md)