Alibaba integrated Qwen AI into Taobao and Tmall for agentic shopping
Alibaba integrated Qwen AI directly into Taobao and Tmall. The agent gained access to a catalog of 4 billion products and can pay for purchases on its own via A

Alibaba has integrated Qwen AI with the Taobao and Tmall marketplaces — the largest AI-agent launch for e-commerce in China. This is not just a chatbot, but a fully functional assistant that makes purchases on its own.
What Qwen AI received The assistant can now operate directly within Alibaba's two largest platforms.
The agent gained access to a catalog of 4 billion products and the built-in Alipay payment system. This means it can complete a full purchase cycle — from search to payment and delivery arrangement. A user simply describes what they need: "buy earphones with good sound quality, no more than 200 yuan, with delivery to my city." Qwen will browse the catalog itself, find suitable options, compare prices and specifications, add the product to the cart, and complete the payment. The user only has to wait for delivery.
How agent shopping works This is an entirely new category of applications.
AI acts not as a request assistant, but as a full-fledged buyer that makes decisions: Understands product descriptions in natural language Searches the catalog by dozens of parameters simultaneously Compares prices, delivery options, and reviews Adds products to the cart and arranges delivery * Can track order status and return if needed ## Why this matters right now For Alibaba, this is an attempt to catch the wave of agent applications that are emerging everywhere — from OpenAI Operator to new Claude models with browser control capabilities. But Alibaba has a unique advantage: it controls the entire stack without external dependencies. It has its own AI (Qwen), its own marketplaces (Taobao and Tmall with 4+ billion products), its own payment system (Alipay), and its own logistics.
This means it can give the agent full control over e-commerce without needing to integrate third-party APIs or seek permission from competitors.
What this means Agent-based e-commerce is transitioning from experiments into production deployment.
This is a pivotal moment: while purchases were previously made by humans, they will now be made by AI. For users, this means saving time. For Alibaba's competitors — it's a signal: if you don't control the entire cycle (AI + marketplace + payments), it will be difficult to compete.