Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
South China Morning Post

Chinese AI agent Manus transcends chatbots, founder of start-up Butterfly Effect says

South China Morning Post

Chinese start-up Butterfly Effect, creator of general-purpose artificial intelligence (AI) agent Manus, appears poised to shake up the red-hot domestic market for large language models (LLMs), as it focuses on applications beyond ChatGPT-like chatbots.

Tencent Holdings-backed Butterfly Effect has caught the AI community's attention at home and abroad, following its invitation-only online preview last week for Manus, which can execute various practical tasks such as creating a custom website, according to a demonstration video online at manus.im.

Touting its edge over chatbots in terms of performance, Manus also claims it can quickly devise an itinerary for a trip to Japan, provide an in-depth analysis of Tesla's stock and offer real-estate tips in New York based on a family's requirements.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

Butterfly effect founder and chief executive Red Xiao Hong, 33, said an AI agent is "more like a human being", compared with how chatbots perform, because it does not only think and answer questions, but interacts with its environment, collects feedback and uses the feedback as a new prompt.

In an interview with Tencent's news portal in February that was published last week, Xiao said he had not considered developing LLMs "from day one" because he wanted to focus on applications, which is a segment of the AI industry that has still not matured. LLMs are the technology underpinning generative AI services like ChatGPT.

Manus is built on existing LLMs, including Anthropic's Claude and fine-tuned versions of Alibaba Group Holding's Qwen, Butterfly Effect co-founder and chief scientist Peak Ji Yichao said on X on Monday. Alibaba owns the Post.

Red Xiao Hong, founder and chief executive of Chinese artificial intelligence start-up Butterfly Effect. Photo: Handout alt=Red Xiao Hong, founder and chief executive of Chinese artificial intelligence start-up Butterfly Effect. Photo: Handout>

Advertisement
Advertisement

Xiao, who frequently shares his thoughts on Chinese social-media platform Jike, said in his latest post that he is busy "expanding [computing] capacity and fixing bugs".

Butterfly Effect's commitment to applications shows another avenue for innovation by a Chinese AI start-up, following DeepSeek's recent breakthrough of building AI models at a fraction of the cost and computing power typically required by bigger tech firms in their LLM projects.

Xiao's view also partly echoes that of Robin Li Yanhong, the co-founder, chairman and chief executive of Baidu, who called on China's tech leaders to focus more on building real-world applications powered by AI, according to a panel discussion at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai in July last year.

"In 2023, intense competition among over 100 LLMs emerged in China, resulting in a significant waste of resources, particularly computing power," Li said.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Since OpenAI released ChatGPT in November 2022, both Big Tech companies and start-ups have primarily put their efforts into building a family of LLMs, the application programming interface of these models for developers, and chatbots for individual and enterprise users.

The race to train LLMs led to heavy investments in computing power and a price war, as these firms pushed to monetise their products.

But after DeepSeek sent shock waves across the AI community for its low-cost approach to developing models, a number of Chinese tech firms are now scrambling to raise fresh funds and push their own open-source LLMs to market.

Open source gives public access to a software program's source code, allowing third-party developers to modify or share its design, fix broken links or scale up its capabilities.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Social-media giant ByteDance, owner of TikTok and Douyin, was said to have sought to acquire Butterfly Effect for US$30 million in early 2024, but its offer was turned down, according to a report by Chinese media Leiphone.

Neither ByteDance nor Butterfly Effect immediately responded to an emailed request for comment on Monday.

While Manus' preview sparked significant interest across the AI community, the application's limited availability has some people doubt its capabilities.

According to Butterfly Effect, the AI agent even outperformed OpenAI's Deep Research based on the GAIA benchmark, a third-party measure of general AI assistants.

Advertisement
Advertisement

"The current invite-only mechanism is due to limited server capacity at this stage," Manus product partner Zhang Tao said in a Jike post last week, adding that "the current version of Manus is still in its infancy, far from what we aim to deliver in our final product".

Xiao founded Butterfly Effect two months before ChatGPT was launched in 2022. Its first product was an AI assistant called Monica.

With Manus shrouded in curiosity and wonder, the AI community's spotlight is now fixed on Xiao who was known as a serial entrepreneur during his student days at Huazhong University of Science and Technology (HUST) in Wuhan, capital of central Hubei province.

In university, Xiao led a team of students in launching multiple in-campus products, including a tool that helps users pick the most suitable major, according to an article published last week on the website of HUST's School of Software Engineering. Xiao graduated with a bachelor's degree in software engineering.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Born in a small town in Jian, a city in eastern Jiangxi province, Xiao developed interest his interest in computer science at a young age, according to his father, who was interviewed by local broadcaster JXNTV. In Xiao's bedroom at his parents' home, he kept his favourite books on a shelf including a biography of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs and philosophical guide The Big Questions.

Some members of Butterfly Effect have also been in the limelight. Ji was named the youngest among those listed by Forbes China in its "30 Under 30" rankings in 2012 and 2013. The scientist, who created mobile browser Mammoth when he was still in high school, founded Peak Labs in 2012 with investment from ZhenFund and Sequoia China, which had been spun off as HongShan.

When Chinese media National Business Daily last week visited Butterfly Effect's offices in Wuhan, a notice on the start-up's gate said: "Closed for development. Please do not disturb."

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP's Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2025. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Up next

If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission. Pricing and availability are subject to change.

Yahoo Tech

Data Privacy Day 2026 is this week: Protect your data with deals on VPNs, data deletion tools and more

Keep yourself anonymous and protect your private information, from your home address to your phone number.

How many letters in the mail or emails have you received letting you know you're part of a data breach and your personal info has been compromised? If you're lucky, you get some sort of settlement from it — though, in my experience, it's barely enough to buy a cup of coffee. Add to that the fact that ISPs, advertisers and retailers are quietly collecting massive amounts of data about you daily. It's easy for those realities of daily online life to fade into the background, but that's why Data Privacy Day (today, January 28) exists: to remind all of us to be more proactive about making better decisions about with whom (or what organizations) we trust with our personal info.

You can start by checking out these 12 tips to be safer online from our colleagues at Engadget. You'll notice that many are absolutely free, as they're more about best practices and self-education (stop using 123456 and iloveyou as your go-to passwords) than anything else. But subscribing to and using relevant services will help, too. To that point, we've rounded up the best deals on VPNs, password managers and data deletion tools below to help you get started.

Best VPN, data deletion and password manager deals

If you're looking for a service where real experts look for and remove your unwanted personal details online, DeleteMe is it. This includes sites that will sell your full home address, list of relatives you have, your phone number and more — all without asking who the buyer is.

There are several deals running right now, depending on your needs. You can sign up two people for one year at $229, or you can sign up four people for $329 a year.

Looking for a password manager that does more than just store your saved passwords? NordPass Premium not only does that but it also gives you access to those passwords on multiple devices, lets you know if you have a weak or exposed password and scans the web to see if your emails or credit card info has appeared in a data leak. 

Right now, you can save 50% and pay just $36 for two years.

Tired of trying to remember all your different password iterations for every account you make? It's not necessary when you use a password manager. 1Password securely generates passwords for you, autosaves them and then autofills them in so you don't have to remember what you created. It'll also send you alerts for weak passwords.

You can subscribe now for 25% off, dropping the price for an individual account to $3 a month, or $4.49 a month for a family account. You can also try it free for 14 days to make sure you want to commit.

Looking for a VPN that can protect multiple devices at once while delivering on speed? Engadget's Sam Chapman has deemed the Proton VPN the best choice.

"It looks and feels good to use on every platform, which makes it fantastic for multiple-device households. It keeps your browsing speeds fast and latencies low, even over long distances. For those who need a VPN to stay anonymous, Proton VPN is the only service implementing full-disk encryption, which means it can manage all your traffic without any of it being visible to Proton itself," he says.

You can get two years for $72 right now with this deal — that's just $3 a month.

NordVPN is a great option if you're looking for a VPN that's fast and doesn't leak any of your data. Sam said in his NordVPN review that it always connects quickly and includes a support page that makes it easy to get live help. Right now, you can get 70% off the two-year plan, bringing the price to just over $81.

Additionally, NordVPN's Plus two-year subscription is also 70% off, at just over $93. This package delivers a powerful ad and tracker blocker that can catch malware downloads, and you'll get access to the NordPass password manager mentioned above. A Plus plan also adds a data breach scanner that checks the dark web for your sensitive information.

Sam says this is one of the best VPNs, particularly for new users — check out his ExpressVPN review here. He notes, "it's an all-around excellent service that only suffers from being a little overpriced — which is why I'm so excited whenever I find it offering a decent deal." Right now, you can score 24 months of service for just $78.

Need more features? Check out the ExpressVPN Advanced package. You'll get two additional simultaneous connections (for a total of 12), the ExpressVPN Keys password manager, advanced ad and tracker blocking, ID protection features and more. It's priced at $101 for a two-year subscription.

CyberGhost offers some of the best automation you'll find in a VPN, Sam says. Using its Smart Rules system, you can set it to auto-connect, disconnect or send you a message when it comes to connecting to Wi-Fi. One of its better features is its streaming servers, which Sam says offer better video quality and more consistent unblocking when used on streaming sites. 

Currently, you can get 26 months of CyberGhost for 79% off the usual price, at $56.94 per year.

Surfshark One is more than just a VPN service — it can also boost your security with its Surfshark Antivirus, email scam checker and Surfshark Alert. Additionally, it comes with a web content blocker. 

This deal gives you 88% off, so you'll pay around $67 for 27 months.

Don't miss out on your chance to keep your data protected for much less!
Don't miss out on your chance to keep your data protected for much less!
Advertisement
Advertisement