MILAN, ITALY -
Media OutReach Newswire
- 4 February 2026 - Alibaba Cloud, the digital technology and
intelligence backbone of Alibaba Group, is partnering with Olympic
Broadcasting Services (OBS) and the International Olympic Committee
(IOC) to deploy advanced cloud and AI technologies for the Olympic and
Paralympic Winter Games Milano Cortina 2026.
Building on deployments at Tokyo 2020, Beijing 2022, and Paris 2024, the
collaboration marks another step in the IOC's transition toward
cloud-based, AI-enabled broadcasting. These technologies are designed to
enhance viewing experience for global audiences, improve operational
efficiency for broadcasters, and create new ways to capture, manage, and
preserve Olympic content at scale.
Dr. Feifei Li, Senior Vice President of Alibaba Cloud Intelligence Group, President of International Business,
said: "Each Olympic Games presents unique challenges in scale,
geography, and complexity. For Milano Cortina 2026, we are applying
cloud and AI capabilities to make broadcasts more dynamic, workflows
more efficient, and Olympic moments more accessible to audiences around
the world."
Better Views: The New Instant Replay System
For Milano Cortina 2026, Alibaba Cloud is introducing upgraded
Real-Time 360º Replay systems that deliverimmersive replays with
fluid camera movement and stroboscopic visual effects. Powered by AI
algorithm that separate athletes from complex backgrounds such as snow
and ice, the system enables three-dimensional reconstructions of key
moments in as little as
15-20 seconds—fast enough for live broadcast use.
The system will be deployed across 17 sports and disciplines, including
ice hockey, freestyle skiing, figure skating, and ski jumping. In
addition to the
BulletTime effects first introduced at Beijing 2022 to provide frame-freeze and slow-motion views, the platform now features a new
Spacetime Slices capability that visualizes multiple phases of an
athlete's movement in a single composite image, allowing viewers to
better understand technique and performance.
Faster Processing and Enhanced Searchability: The New Media System
OBS is currently in the early development phase of the
Automatic Media Description (AMD) System powered by Alibaba's
Qwen advanced large language model. The system automatically identifies
athletes and key moments, generates event descriptions, and tags video
assets
within seconds, significantly reducing manual processing time.
Using natural-language queries, such as "find the figure skating gold
medal performance," the OBS teams can retrieve this information almost
instantly. The system improves searchability, and enables OBS teams to
more easily find, develop and distribute Olympic stories across
platforms.
Cloud Broadcasting: A New Standard
Cloud-based broadcasting continues to expand at Milano Cortina 2026.
Since its introduction at Tokyo 2020, OBS Live Cloud has evolved from an
optional service to a core distribution platform. At the Paris 2024
Games, it became the primary method for remote broadcast delivery.
For Milano Cortina 2026, the Live Cloud platform will support 39
broadcasters, delivering 428 live video feeds, including 26 in
ultra-high definition streams, along with 72 audio feeds. By replacing
traditional satellite links and dedicated transmission lines,
cloud-based delivery reduces cost, setup time, and technical complexity,
while improving flexibility and resilience.
For the first time, the
OBS Olympic Video Player (OVP) will deliver high-definition live
streams using Alibaba Cloud's infrastructure, enabling smaller
broadcasters to access professional-grade broadcast capabilities without
heavy upfront investment.
Yiannis Exarchos, CEO, Olympic Broadcasting Services, said
"Alibaba Cloud provides the foundation that makes large-scale AI
possible, making our operations more efficient and unlocking new
opportunities to enhance viewers' experience and deepen their
understanding of the sport and athletes' performances on the world's
biggest stage."
More Digital Content Than Ever
Milano Cortina 2026 will also see the largest volume of ready-to-use
digital assets in Olympic history. More than 5,000 short-form pieces,
including behind-the-scenes footage, highlights, and emotional
reactions, will be distributed through OBS Content+, a cloud-based
platform powered by Alibaba Cloud.
The platform's advanced discovery tool allows teams worldwide to locate,
edit, and publish content efficiently, regardless of location.
First Use of LLM Technologies at the Olympics and Next-Generation Olympic Archive with Alibaba's Qwen
For Milano Cortina 2026, the IOC has introduced its first
large-language-model-based system in Olympic history, powered by
Alibaba's Qwen models. The initiative, known as
"Olympic AI Assistants," supports fan engagement worldwide and internal operations across the Olympic ecosystem.
The Olympic AI Assistant, embedded on the IOC's global website
olympics.com, provides multilingual conversational support, real-time
event information allowing fans to access official Olympic Games content
through a chat-based interface.
The same Qwen-powered technology is being deployed at the Olympic Museum
in Lausanne, where visitors will have access to personalized AI audio
guides that enhance the museum experience.
Internally, the IOC has launched an AI Assistant - powered by Alibaba's
Qwen large language model—on its secure portal for National Olympic
Committees (NOCs). The AI tool enables NOC staff to locate documents,
policies, and grant guidelines through natural language queries, with
built-in multilingual translation support.
In parallel, Alibaba Cloud continues to enhance
Sports AI, a cloud-based media archiving solution first
introduced at the Paris 2024 Games. The upgraded solution includes AI
tagging, video search, and conversational search, making the Olympics
archive instantly searchable and more accessible.
Managing more than eight petabytes of historical Olympic media, the
system utilizes Alibaba Cloud's proprietary AI algorithms to automate
tagging, categorization, and multimodal search across decades of
content. New conversational search capabilities, powered by Alibaba's
Qwen, allow users to retrieve specific clips using simple spoken or
written commands.
By integrating with the IOC's media asset platform, Flex, the solution
enables fully automatic tagging of Olympic multimedia assets, turning
previously unused media assets into a living, searchable knowledge
library.
Ilario Corna, Chief Technology and Information Officer, International Olympic Committee,
said: "Milano Cortina 2026 marks a defining moment in the integration
of AI into the Olympic Movement. Alibaba Cloud has been incredible in
putting these leading capabilities to work in very practical, helpful
ways—not only enhancing the everyday experience for our fans through
first use of LLM technologies at the Olympics, but building intelligent
systems such as Sports AI that will preserve historic Olympic moments
for generations to come."
Since Alibaba Group became a Worldwide TOP Partner of the IOC in 2017,
Alibaba Cloud has played an increasingly central role in how the Olympic
Games are delivered, experienced, and remembered—helping to place cloud
computing and AI at the core of the world's largest sporting event.