In China, U.S.-based large language models like ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini are technically banned, blocked, or buried under layers of censorship. The Chinese government has only explicitly banned ChatGPT, citing concerns over political content, while other U.S. models like Claude and Gemini are not formally banned but remain inaccessible due to the Great Firewall. U.S. LLM providers also restrict access from China but leave some loopholes: OpenAI blocks API use but Azure continues to serve enterprise clients via offshore data centers; Anthropic blocks access to Claude within China but permits use by Chinese subsidiaries based in supported regions abroad; and Google does not offer the Gemini API in China, but access seems to be still possible via third-parties like Cloudflare (we reached out to Google for a comment but didn’t hear back).
But on Taobao, the country’s largest e-commerce platform, consumers and companies can buy access to these models with just a few clicks. This piece explains how Western models are priced, advertised, bought, and sold in China, and what their popularity reveals about state censorship, platform enforcement, and consumer demand. — Read More