Jack Ma undertakes role of visiting professor in Japan
Alibaba Group co-founder and executive chairman Jack Ma attends the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China, Sept. 17, 2018. (Reuters Photo)


Chinese billionaire Jack Ma turned up in Japan Monday where he took up a visiting professor position at a university, another new academic role for the founder of tech giant Alibaba.

Tokyo College, a research institute run by the prestigious University of Tokyo, said Ma would "share his rich experience and pioneering knowledge on entrepreneurship, corporate management and innovation" in seminars for students and staff.

The 58-year-old, who also heads his own Jack Ma Foundation, a philanthropic organization, has kept a low profile since his fall from grace during a Chinese government crackdown on the tech industry over two years ago.

But he recently accepted an honorary professorship from the University of Hong Kong's business school, reportedly for a three-year term ending in March 2026.

On its website, Tokyo College said Ma would "conduct joint research and projects" with faculty members, " especially in the field of sustainable agriculture and food production."

As visiting professor, the magnate is also expected to "provide advice and support" on research topics.

Before launching Alibaba – whose operations span e-commerce, cloud computing, media, and AI – Ma taught English for eight years at Hangzhou Dianzi University in eastern China.

He was one of the most high-profile targets of a crackdown on alleged anti-competitive practices by some of China's biggest names in tech from late 2020.

Driven by fears that major internet firms control too much data and expanded too quickly, regulators issued Alibaba with record fines and scrapped the initial public offering (IPO) of Ma's Ant Group.

That came after Ma had criticized China's regulators and financial systems in a speech in Shanghai.

Ma has largely been absent from public view over the past two years, but was spotted on a Spanish island and was reportedly living in Japan for much of 2022.

He made a rare public appearance in China in March, when he visited a school founded by Alibaba partners in the city of Hangzhou.

Ma's appointment began Monday and runs through the end of October, the university said.

Tokyo College, founded in 2019, connects the University of Tokyo with researchers and institutions abroad, including College de France.

Its research focuses on themes such as the digital revolution, Japan viewed from within and outside, the humanities in 2050 and the value of life.

Ma founded the e-commerce firm Alibaba in the 1990s and was once China's richest man.

He is well known in Japan as a friend of Masayoshi Son, the founder and chief executive of SoftBank Group Corp.