Alibaba is preparing to unveil the integration of its AI platform Qwen and online marketplace Taobao, a move that seeks to drive shopping with conversations rather than keyword searches, according to a source ‌familiar with ⁠the ⁠decision.

The move will enable consumers to browse, compare and ​purchase items via the Qwen app by chatting with the ​artificial intelligence agent, rather than manually navigating product listings.

The Qwen app will have access to the entire Taobao and Tmall ⁠catalog of ‌over 4 billion products, backed by a “skills library” capable of managing logistics and ⁠after-sales services. It will also offer shopping recommendations based on users’ order history and shopping preferences.

Inside Taobao, Alibaba will launch a Qwen-powered AI shopping assistant, which includes tools for virtual try-ons and 30-day price tracking.

Alibaba’s push into AI-driven shopping highlights a gap between ‌Chinese and Western e-commerce platforms; China’s model allows AI to be embedded ​directly into ​live transactions. In ⁠the U.S., platforms are more fragmented: Amazon has used AI to improve shopping within its marketplace but ​remains cautious about full autonomy. Canada’s Shopify allows the use of external AI agents rather than running an integrated consumer AI platform.