Ma has kept a low profile since late 2020, when a speech he made attacking Chinese regulators was followed by Beijing pulling Alibaba affiliate Ant Group's planned IPO.
A record fine of $2.75 billion fine was then imposed on the company for alleged unfair practices.
Ma has been spotted around the world over the past two years, including on the Spanish island of Mallorca, and was reportedly living in Japan for much of 2022.
But on Monday he visited a school founded by Alibaba partners in the eastern city of Hangzhou, according to a post on the school's official social media account.
Ma, a former English teacher, met staff and toured classrooms before talking about the challenges artificial intelligence (AI) might pose to education.
"ChatGPT and similar technologies are just the beginning of the AI era. We should use artificial intelligence to solve problems instead of being controlled by it," the post quoted Ma as saying.
Ma was one of the most high-profile targets of a crackdown by officials on alleged anti-competitive practices by some of China's biggest names in tech, driven by fears that major internet firms controlled too much data and had expanded too quickly.
Ant Group said in January Ma had ceded control of the fintech company, adjusting its ownership structure so that "no shareholder, alone or jointly with other parties, will have control over Ant Group".
In a sign that the official grip may now be loosening, authorities said in December Ant had won approval to raise 10.5 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) for its consumer finance arm.
China says US firm under investigation for 'illegal operations'
Beijing (AFP) March 27, 2023 -
China is investigating a US due diligence firm for "illegal" activities, a government spokesperson said Monday, after the company accused authorities of detaining five local employees and shutting down its Beijing office.
The New York-based Mintz Group is "suspected of illegal operations", Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said, adding that "the relevant case is now under investigation".
Mao did not share further details about the investigation into Mintz Group, which specialises in investigations into fraud, corruption and workplace misconduct allegations, as well as background checks.
The firm said on Friday that authorities had "detained the five staff in Mintz Group's Beijing office, all of them Chinese nationals, and have closed our operations there".
The company has "retained legal counsel to engage with the authorities and support our people and their families", it added.
Mintz did not respond to an AFP request for comment on Beijing's announcement Monday.
Mintz Group has offices in 18 locations, including Washington.
Its Asia head, Randal Phillips, had said in 2017 that the United States should address structural imbalances in trade stemming from Chinese policies.
Phillips -- formerly a chief representative for the US's Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in China -- also testified before the congressional US-China Economic and Security Review Commission in 2018 on Beijing's efforts to exert international influence.
He is now based in Singapore, according to the group's website.
The detentions come in the face of some of the worst US-China relations in decades, as the two powers clash over everything from trade to human rights.
Tensions flared in February after the United States shot down an alleged Chinese spy balloon, which Beijing insisted was a weather monitoring device.
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