Mandarin is replacing Cantonese. Offbeat AI fights back as Big Tech looks away
Cantonese is facing decline due to the dominance of Mandarin, limited learning resources, and a lack of standardized written form. Votee AI, a Hong Kong-based company, is using artificial intelligence to help preserve Cantonese and other languages overlooked by major tech companies.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedCantonese is facing decline due to the dominance of Mandarin, limited learning resources, and a lack of standardized written form. Votee AI, a Hong Kong-based company, is using artificial intelligence to help preserve Cantonese and other languages overlooked by major tech companies. Their goal is to create living records of languages beyond English, as current AI models are primarily trained on English and lack fluency in most other languages. A key challenge for Cantonese is the scarcity of digital text that accurately reflects spoken language, hindering AI training. Votee AI aims to address this by developing large language models that can effectively process and preserve Cantonese.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedVotee AI aims to use large language models (LLMs) to preserve languages, especially those overlooked by tech giants.
Preserving Cantonese has been challenging due to the dominance of Mandarin, limited learning resources and a lack of a standard written form.
Cantonese lacks written text that accurately reflects how it is spoken, unlike Mandarin, English or Spanish.
A declining number of young learners means the Cantonese language faces an uncertain future.
Mainstream AI models remain ‘functionally illiterate’ for 99 per cent of the world’s languages.