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People are listing invite codes to Chinese AI agent Manus for $1,000 and more on resale sites

Sarah Perkel
2 min read
Microsoft is betting big on AI. Company insiders have serious doubts.
Microsoft is betting big on AI. Company insiders have serious doubts.
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  • Manus, a new agentic AI system from a Chinese startup, is starting to generate DeepSeek-like buzz.

  • The AI agent is currently in closed beta, with limited invitations being distributed.

  • Access codes are being listed on third-party reseller sites for a wide range of asking prices.

Resellers are testing the waters on how much people are willing to pay to score an invite to Manus, the latest buzzy agentic AI out of China.

Manus is currently in closed beta, which means the public can't try it out without getting an invite code from an existing user. As a result, listings are cropping up on the Chinese reseller site Goofish, also known as Xianyu, claiming to offer invite codes.

Searching for "Manus" on the site brings up fifty pages of listings, both incredibly cheap, at about 1 to 2 Chinese yuan, or a little less than one USD, to the more exorbitant. Sorting from highest to lowest pricing on the site brings up listings in the equivalent of thousands of American dollars.

An image of the Goofish storefront, which shows four listings for Manus access codes.
Listings on Goofish can reach into the thousands, once converted to USD.Steven Tweedie

The interest has spilled over onto eBay, where an unsold listing for an email and password to access Manus AI starts at $1,000.

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It's not clear how many, if any, of the listings on Goofish are actually selling, particularly the higher priced codes. But their presence alone highlights a growing international interest in exploring the AI's purported capabilities.

An energy not unlike the hype that surrounded Deepseek's initial entry into the marketplace now surrounds Manus — some early users claim it's revolutionary, while others say it falls short of expectations.

The Butterly Effect, the Chinese company behind Manus, claims it's capable of a variety of real-world tasks, from analyzing stocks to developing minigames and screenplays.

"This isn't just another chatbot or workflow," said Yichao "Peak" Ji, Manus cofounder, in a Youtube video announcing the AI. "It's a truly autonomous agent that bridges the gap between conception and execution."

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The team behind Manus did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider prior to publication.

Ji goes on to add that the program has already proven itself capable of "solving real-world problems" on gig-work platforms like Fiverr and Upwork, as well as "proven its capabilities" in Kaggle Competitions, which challenges users to solve problems based off data sets.

Manus' developers appear to be positioning it as the model to beat, in direct competition with other "chain-of-thought" offerings, such as ChatGPT's "Deep Research," and Claude's "Extended Thinking" mode.

"We see it as the next paradigm of human-machine collaboration, and potentially a glimpse into AGI," Ji said.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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TechCrunch

Browser Use, one of the tools powering Manus, is also going viral

Kyle Wiggers
2 min read

Manus, the viral AI "agent" platform from Chinese startup Butterfly Effect, has had an unintended side effect: raising the profile of another AI tool called Browser Use.

Browser Use, which aims to make websites more accessible for agentic applications that perform tasks on a user's behalf, has experienced explosive growth in the past week. Daily downloads more than quintupled from around 5,000 on March 3 to 28,000 on March 10, co-creator Gregor Zunic told TechCrunch.

"The past few days have been really wild," Zunic said via DM. "We are the biggest trending repository [on GitHub], got loads of downloads [and] all that actually converts to big usage numbers."

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Why the uptick? A post about how Manus leverages Browser Use garnered over 2.4 millions views and hundreds of reshares on X. Browser Use is one of the components Manus employs to execute various tasks, like clicking through site menus and filling out forms.

Zunic launched the eponymous company behind Browser Use with Magnus Müller last year out of ETH Zurich's Student Project House accelerator. The pair thought web agents — agents that navigate websites and web apps autonomously — were going to be the "big thing" in 2025.

"What started as casual brainstorming over a few lunches turned into a challenge: Let’s build something small, throw it on Hacker News, and see what happens," Zunic said. "We put together an MVP in four days, launched it, and boom — number one. From there, it’s been an absolute rocket."

Brower Use extracts a website's elements — buttons, widgets, and so on — to allow AI models to more easily interact with them. The tool can manage multiple browser tabs, set up actions like saving files and performing database operations, and handle mouse and keyboard inputs.

Browser Use
A demo of browser Use in actionImage Credits:Browser Use

Browser Use the company charges for managed plans, but also offers a free, self-hosted version of its software. That's the version that's blown up in the days since Manus' unveiling.

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Zunic says he and Magnus are trying to "sell a shovel" to developers chasing after the gold rush of web agents.

"We wanted to create a foundation layer that everyone will build browser agents on," Zunic said. "In our minds, there will be more agents on the web than humans by the end of the year."

That might sound overly bullish, but several analysts predict that the broader market for AI agents will indeed grow enormously in the months to come. According to Research and Markets, the sector will reach $42 billion in 2029. Deloitte anticipates that half of companies using AI will deploy AI agents by 2027.

Manus effect aside, Browser Use's timing appears to have been fortuitous.

Updated 12:45 p.m. Pacific: An earlier version of this story incorrectly referred to "Browser Use" as "Browser User" in the headline. We regret the error.

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Business Insider

Meet 4 of the Chinese AI models upending the market

Lee Chong Ming
Updated
5 min read
  • China's AI race is heating up, with new models making waves in the industry.

  • The latest contender is Manus, an AI agent being hailed as the next potential "DeepSeek moment."

  • Here are four key players to watch.

China's AI scene is heating up, with new models rivaling top US players and rattling the stock market.

The latest contender: Manus, an AI agent that some are calling China's next "DeepSeek moment."

But it's not alone. Last week, Alibaba unveiled an AI model that it says outperforms DeepSeek while being more efficient, sending its stock soaring.

With Chinese AI models gaining ground fast, here are four key players to watch.

1. DeepSeek's R1

DeepSeek was the first Chinese AI startup to shake up the industry. In January, its new model sent some US tech stocks plunging and raised questions about whether the US lead in AI has slipped.

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The startup, based in Hang Zhou, was founded in 2023 by hedge fund entrepreneur Liang Wenfeng.

After buying thousands of Nvidia chips, Wenfeng built DeepSeek's R1 reasoning model on its V3 base model, training it on around 2,000 Nvidia H800 chips at an overall cost of roughly $5.6 million, the startup said.

That's a fraction of what top players like Meta and OpenAI are spending. Mark Zuckerberg has said Meta plans to spend over $60 billion this year as it doubles down on AI.

Despite its lower cost, its R1 model rivals top competitors like ChatGPT's o1, DeepSeek said.

Its impact on the AI chip market was immediate: Nvidia's stock plunged nearly 17%, wiping hundreds of billions from its market cap.

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Microsoft CEO's, Satya Nadella, wrote on X in January: "Jevons paradox strikes again!"— suggesting that as AI becomes more efficient and accessible, demand will only skyrocket.

Marc Andreessen, the cofounder of storied Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, took it a step further. He called DeepSeek's R1 "AI's Sputnik moment," likening it to the Soviet satellite launch that triggered the space race.

But DeepSeek's R1 has its limits. While it appears capable of doing much of what ChatGPT can, it couches answers related to sensitive issues in China.

2. Alibaba's QwQ-32B

Alibaba has become a key player to watch after it open-sourced its QwQ-32B model last week. The company said the model used less data than DeepSeek.

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The move sent Alibaba's stock surging 8% over two days, while Nvidia took another hit.

Alibaba said its QwQ-32B model, with one-fifth of the parameters of DeepSeek-R1, is designed for efficiency.

The model is now open-source on platforms including Hugging Face. Open-source models allow for the free and open sharing of software to anyone for any purpose.

Alibaba's shares in Hong Kong and its secondary listing in New York are up nearly 70% so far this year, though its $348.8 billion market cap is still much smaller than Amazon's $2.05 trillion.

The company has been on a hot streak. Last month, its stock surged after a partnership with Apple to bring AI features to iPhones in China. Shares also climbed on news of Xi Jinping meeting with the country's tech moguls, including from Alibaba.

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Early this month, the company announced plans to invest at least 380 billion Chinese yuan, or $53 billion, in cloud computing and AI infrastructure over the next three years.

3. Tencent's Yuanbao

Tencent's AI chatbot Yuanbao topped China's iOS App Store last week, surpassing DeepSeek as the most downloaded free app, Bloomberg reported.

Tencent, based in Shenzhen, operates China's biggest social media app WeChat — which is used by nearly 1.4 billion people.

Last month, the company added a download button for Yuanbao in WeChat, making the AI chatbot more accessible to the app's users, the South China Morning Post reported.

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Yuanbao is now the third most downloaded free app in China's iOS App Store, leading behind DeepSeek and ByteDance's Doubao. Doubao is a ChatGPT-like conversational bot.

In February, Tencent integrated DeepSeek's R1 into several of its products, including WeChat's search feature and a virtual companion in its evergreen game Peacekeepr Elite, Bloomberg reported last week.

The report added that Tencent also launched a Hunyuan Turbo edition that it says delivers answers faster than DeepSeek.

Tencent's shares surged 10% over two days last week.

4. Manus

Manus has just become China's latest AI sensation.

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According to multiple reports, it was built by Chinese startup Monica, which appears to be a subsidiary of Butterfly Effect. Manus' privacy policy said that Butterfly Effect is a Singapore-registered entity.

Researchers at Monica said Manus is the world's first fully autonomous AI agent. Unlike chatbots that require multiple inputs, it can complete complex tasks like sorting résumés, analyzing stocks, scraping data, and even building websites after a single prompt.

According to Manus' website, it outperforms OpenAI's Deep Research model on the GAIA benchmark, a tool for comparing models.

Following its debut last week, some users questioned whether Manus was built from scratch, suggesting it might be more of an AI wrapper leveraging other models, like Anthropic's Claude 3.5 Sonnet.

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Yichao 'Peak' Ji, the cofounder of Manus, said in a post on X on Monday that the product uses Claude 3.5 Sonnet v1 and fine-tuned Alibaba's Qwen models.

Dean Ball, an AI policy researcher, said in a Sunday X post that it's "wrong to call Manus a 'DeepSeek moment'" — because it goes even further.

"DeepSeek was about replicating capabilities already achieved by American firms," Ball said. "Manus is actually advancing the frontier. The most sophisticated computer using AI now comes from a Chinese startup, full stop."

But others are calling it overhyped. TechCrunch's Kyle Wiggers and Pleias cofounder Alexander Doria said they found Manus prone to factual errors, execution failures, and endless loops during tests.

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AI researcher Luiza Jarovsky also raised concerns about data privacy, asking where Manus stores its data and whether China has access.

For now, access to Manus requires an invitation.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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GuruFocus.com

China's AI Shockwave: Alibaba-Backed Manus AI Takes on OpenAI in a High-Stakes Battle

Khac Phu Nguyen
1 min read

Chinese AI start-up Manus AI just locked in a major partnership with Alibaba (NYSE:BABA)-backed Qwen AI, and it could be a significant move in China's AI sector. Manus AI, which recently made waves for claiming it built the world's first general AI agent, will now integrate its cutting-edge tech with Qwen's open-source AI models. The move comes as Manus struggles to keep up with surging demand, with its invite-only platform already facing traffic overloads. Teaming up with Qwen could provide the scale and computing muscle Manus needs to expand its AI agent's reach.

This partnership reflects the intensifying AI race in China. Just months ago, DeepSeek shook up the industry by delivering an OpenAI-level chatbot at a fraction of the cost. Now, Manus is positioning itself as the next big disruptor, and with Alibaba in its corner, it has the potential to gain an edge in China's competitive AI market. For Alibaba, backing Manus aligns with its broader efforts to expand AI capabilities as the company navigates the rapidly evolving landscape.

The big question now is how fast this partnership translates into real-world impact. If Manus can successfully integrate with Qwen and deliver a seamless AI agent experience, it could reshape enterprise automation in China. Investors should keep a close eye on how Manus scales its platform, how Alibaba capitalizes on this collaboration, and whether this marks the beginning of a new wave of AI-driven disruption in the region.

This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

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