Baidu’s Ernie 5.0 Shakes Up AI Race with Multimodal Power Play

Baidu just dropped a bombshell in the AI arms race—Ernie 5.0 isn’t just another upgrade, it’s a full-spectrum challenger to the big players. Multimodal capabilities? Check. Disruptive potential? Absolutely. Wall Street’s already pricing in the hype—because nothing says 'innovation' like a speculative stock bump.
This isn’t incremental—it’s a leap. While OpenAI and Google tweak their models, Baidu’s playing for keeps. The timing? Impeccable. The stakes? Higher than a crypto trader’s leverage. One thing’s clear: the AI oligarchy just got a new contender.
And yes, the suits will call it 'transformative' while quietly shorting the stock. Some things never change.
Baidu presentation: Ernie 5.0 adds leap in multimodal AI
According to Baidu’s technical documentation on Hugging Face, Ernie 5.0 is built on the upgraded ERNIE-4.5-VL-28B-A3B architecture and has a significant improvement in multimodal reasoning capabilities from its previous models.
One of its most fronted features, called “Thinking with Images,” helps the AI large language model to dynamically zoom in and out of images and examine fine-grained visual details. Baidu claims this feature is very similar to human visual problem-solving and, when combined with image search tools, improves the model’s ability to process intricate visual information and handle long-tail knowledge.
During the demonstration, Baidu compared Ernie 5.0’s performance in benchmarks against competitors DeepSeek, Alphabet Inc.’s Google Gemini, and OpenAI’s GPT-5. Tests included language comprehension, audio analysis, and visual understanding tasks, where it reportedly came close to the top AI large language models.
Alongside its AI software, Baidu also introduced two next-generation Kunlun chips manufactured to improve large-scale AI computation. The Kunlun M100 chip, made for large-scale inference tasks, is scheduled for release in early 2026, while Kunlun M300’s ultra-large-scale multimodal model training and inference could come early 2027.
The tech firm also unveiled new applications for industrial and commercial use, including an agentic tool for controlling urban traffic lights, a digital avatar replacement for streamers, and a code-free development platform intended to make AI deployment more accessible to developers and the general public.
Baidu still lagging behind the competition
Despite its technological advancements, Baidu is still well behind rivals ByteDance Ltd. and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd in AI model development. According to Bloomberg, Baidu initially held an early lead in China’s AI business, but the mentioned competitors have overtaken the company in AI-native applications and open-source model development.
Baidu’s broader revenue has also been affected, with advertising income expected to fall by approximately 8% in the September quarter, the largest decline in nearly a decade.
Company founder Li blasted the “unhealthy, unsustainable” AI ecosystem where chip manufacturers reap the majority of profits, while app developers see comparatively little gain.
“No matter how much money chipmakers make, the models built on top of the chips should generate 10 times the value, and the applications developed on top of the models should create 100 times the value. Only then can we achieve a healthy industrial ecosystem,” Li said.
US vs China AI competition still close, Nvidia CEO Huang claims
Baidu’s announcements come amid an ongoing AI competition between China and the United States. Per US President Donald Trump, the West is far ahead of China in AI because companies have yet to find a manufacturer better than US-based semiconductor chipmakers.
Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang recently predicted that “China beat the US” in AI development due to lower energy costs and fewer regulatory restrictions. Huang warned that Western countries, including the US and UK, could fall behind due to excessive regulatory controls, while Chinese tech companies benefit from subsidized energy that reduces operational costs.
After meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in early November, POTUS TRUMP stated that the United States would restrict China from accessing Nvidia’s most advanced Blackwell chips.
“The most advanced, we will not let anybody have them other than the United States. We don’t give the Blackwell chip to other people,” Trump told CBS in his recent 60 Minutes interview.
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