# Video İlgili Makaleler

HTX Haber Merkezi, kripto endüstrisindeki piyasa trendleri, proje güncellemeleri, teknoloji gelişmeleri ve düzenleyici politikaları kapsayan "Video" hakkında en son makaleleri ve derinlemesine analizleri sunmaktadır.

Chinese Young Man's AI Short Goes Viral Abroad! Hollywood Director Searches Online: Wants to Hire Him

A young Chinese creator, Mx-Shell, an amateur filmmaker from Yunnan with no formal film training, has gone viral internationally with his AI-generated short film "Zombie Scavenger." Created independently in about 10 days using the Chinese AI video tool Seedance 2.0 at a minimal cost, the film features a robot cowboy in a post-apocalyptic world. Its unique atomic-punk style and cinematic quality caught the attention of Hollywood. The film initially gained little traction on Chinese platform Bilibili. However, after PJ Ace, founder of LA-based AI studio Genre.ai, shared it on X (formerly Twitter), praising it as "one of the best short films I've seen in recent years," it quickly garnered millions of views overseas. PJ Ace then publicly sought to hire the unknown director, sparking a cross-platform search. The creator, who doesn't speak English, was unaware of the overseas buzz until Chinese internet users relayed the message. Connection was eventually made via a QQ email address shared in Bilibili comments, and Mx-Shell received a job offer from the Hollywood director. The article highlights this as a case of "talent export." It argues that while China's competitive AI tool market lowers technical barriers, true success still relies on individual creativity, aesthetic judgment, and narrative skill—qualities Mx-Shell demonstrated. His story exemplifies how AI tools can empower previously unseen creators with compelling ideas to reach a global audience, even if initial recognition sometimes comes from abroad before reverberating back home.

marsbit05/14 07:33

Chinese Young Man's AI Short Goes Viral Abroad! Hollywood Director Searches Online: Wants to Hire Him

marsbit05/14 07:33

The Real Battlefield of AI Lies in the 'Dark Forest'

The article "AI's Real Battlefield is in the 'Dark Forest'" discusses the shifting dynamics in the global AI landscape, contrasting the strategic directions of Chinese and U.S. AI developers. Chinese companies like Alibaba (with its "HappyHorse" video model), ByteDance (Seedance 2.0), and Kuaishou (Kling 3.0) have taken the lead in text-to-video generation, surpassing OpenAI’s now-discontinued Sora. These models are deeply integrated into their parent companies’ content ecosystems (e.g., Douyin, Kuaishou), serving to reduce content creation costs and enhance user engagement rather than operating as standalone profit centers. In contrast, U.S. firms are pivoting toward high-stakes enterprise and security applications. Anthropic’s Claude Mythos model demonstrates advanced capabilities in autonomously discovering and exploiting software vulnerabilities, prompting concern at the highest levels of U.S. financial and governmental institutions. OpenAI responded with its own GPT-5.4-Cyber, signaling a strategic shift from consumer-facing products to enterprise-grade tools focused on cybersecurity and programming. The divergence is attributed to fundamental differences in resources and market structures. U.S. companies, backed by vast computational resources (e.g., Amazon and Google supply Anthropic with substantial funding and TPU access), can pursue deep, specialized R&D in high-value B2B sectors. Chinese firms, facing significant compute power constraints and a less mature enterprise SaaS market, have found success by leveraging their massive consumer platforms and optimizing for cost-efficiency. The article warns that the AI race is entering a "dark forest" phase—a reference to competitive dynamics where cybersecurity capabilities could determine digital sovereignty. While Chinese models like Zhipu AI’s GLM-5.1 show promise in narrowing the gap in coding proficiency, the author stresses that achieving parity in security-critical AI will require asymmetric strategies, including greater investment in coding models, adaptation to domestic hardware, and exploring international markets in the Global South.

marsbit04/18 01:53

The Real Battlefield of AI Lies in the 'Dark Forest'

marsbit04/18 01:53

The Creator of Kling Returns to Alibaba and Builds Another Dark Horse

The article discusses the rise of HappyHorse-1.0, an AI video generation model developed by Alibaba, which topped the Artificial Analysis leaderboard in both text-to-video and image-to-video categories in April 2026. The model was created under the leadership of Zhang Di, who returned to Alibaba in November 2025 after working at Kuaishou, where he led the development of the Kling model. HappyHorse is open-source and commercially available, similar to Alibaba's Qwen model. Zhang Di's background includes extensive experience in large-scale data systems and machine learning at Alibaba and Kuaishou, which contributed to the rapid development of HappyHorse within just five months. The model uses a 15-billion-parameter transformer architecture with native multimodal training, supporting multiple languages and lip-sync capabilities. It also focuses on reducing inference time and cost, making it practical for commercial use. The primary application of HappyHorse is in e-commerce, where it can generate product videos to enhance user engagement and conversion rates by creating contextual and personalized content. This aligns with Alibaba's strengths in commerce, advertising, and data feedback loops. The model's success with open-source approach contrasts with challenges faced by closed-source models like OpenAI's Sora (shut down due to high costs) and ByteDance's Seedance 2.0 (paused over copyright issues). HappyHorse represents a strategic move for Alibaba to integrate AI video generation into its core business ecosystems.

marsbit04/13 05:10

The Creator of Kling Returns to Alibaba and Builds Another Dark Horse

marsbit04/13 05:10

Claiming the "Happy Horse": Alibaba's AI Lays Out the "Eight Trigrams Formation"

Alibaba has officially claimed the "HappyHorse" (HappyHorse-1.0) AI video generation model, which recently topped the global benchmark on Artificial Analysis with an Elo score of 1357. Developed by Alibaba’s ATH (Alibaba Token Hub) innovation unit, the model is notable for its ability to generate high-definition video with synchronized audio and sound effects from text input, significantly improving motion coherence and reducing production time and cost. This launch is part of a broader acceleration in Alibaba’s AI strategy. In late March and early April, the company released three flagship models in quick succession: Qwen3.5-Omni, Wan2.7-Image, and Qwen3.6-Plus. The latter broke global daily call volume records with 1.4 trillion tokens processed shortly after release. Alibaba has also undergone significant organizational restructuring to support its AI ambitions. In March, it established the ATH business group, led by CEO Wu Yongming, to integrate AI development, cloud services, and application deployment. Further changes in April included forming a group-level technology committee and consolidating the Tongyi Lab into a dedicated AI model division. The company is investing heavily in AI, with plans to spend over 380 billion RMB on cloud and AI infrastructure over three years. Its self-developed GPUs have already seen mass production. While the market has responded positively to these moves, challenges remain in balancing centralized control with operational flexibility and maintaining team stability amid rapid changes.

marsbit04/11 04:07

Claiming the "Happy Horse": Alibaba's AI Lays Out the "Eight Trigrams Formation"

marsbit04/11 04:07

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