OpenAI and Microsoft are accusing Chinese AI startup DeepSeek of stealing their market share and potentially portions of their code. They allege that DeepSeek used a technique called 'distillation' to train its chatbot, mimicking ChatGPT's reasoning process and essentially 'sucking the knowledge out' of it. OpenAI, however, hasn't provided evidence to support these claims.
The DeepSeek AI application is seen on a mobile phone in this photo illustration taken in Warsaw, Poland on 27 January, 2025.OpenAI and Microsoft are big mad that Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has stolen their market share and, possibly, portions of their code. It’s a deeply funny claim from the company that made ChatGPT, a program it once admittedthat it had evidence DeepSeek used what it called “distillation” to build its wildly successful chatbot. I’ll let David Sacks, a storied member of the.
Sacks assured Fox News viewers that America was still number one and that the U.S. just has to keep building thethat Trump wants. “There are still great advantages to having an enormous number of chips. And this is an area where America could continue to lead, is a build-out of this infrastructure and having the most advanced chips,” Sacks said. “So I think it’s a little bit of an overreaction to say that America does not need AI data centers anymore.
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