Tag: DeepSeek

  • Fox News AI Newsletter: Bill would ban DeepSeek

    Fox News AI Newsletter: Bill would ban DeepSeek

    Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

    IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

    – House reps unveil bill banning DeepSeek from US government devices over alleged ties to Chinese government
    – Perplexity AI bids on TikTok, CEO says it’s a win-win for Trump
    – Donny Osmond adds AI version of himself as a teen to Las Vegas residency

    DeepSeek (REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration)

    ‘DEEPLY DISTURBING EVIDENCE’: House lawmakers are introducing legislation Thursday to ban the Chinese AI DeepSeek from U.S. government devices, arguing that the software is “directly linked to the Chinese Communist Party” and poses a “five-alarm national security fire.” 

    AN AMERICAN TIKTOK: The CEO of AI startup Perplexity, Aravind Srinivas, confirmed his company’s bid for TikTok U.S. and said the deal checks all the boxes for investors and President Donald Trump, including an ownership stake for the U.S.

    SEEING DOUBLE: Donny Osmond is bringing on a new co-star for his Las Vegas residency: himself.

    donald-trump

    President Donald Trump speaks to reporters after signing a series of executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House on January 23, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

    ‘AI POWERHOUSE’ : The White House is opening its artificial intelligence plan up to Americans to contribute policy ideas to the Trump administration to ensure that the United States is “the undeniable leader” in AI technology. 

    PEDAL TO THE METAL: For a commander on the battlefield, a split second of decision advantage can determine the difference between victory and defeat. In every battlespace, AI is critical to enabling action at the speed of kinetic and non-kinetic conflict. It is already being successfully applied to rapid data processing, target recognition, combat simulation, countering drones and strategic decision-making for defense missions. And looking across current conflict zones and hot spots, we need its benefits faster than ever before, in environments from urban terrain to cyber, sea and space.

    TAKING CHARGE: Sylvester Stallone is the latest celebrity embracing artificial intelligence. The “Rocky” star invested, along with several others, in Largo.ai, an AI-driven analytics platform for film, TV and advertising, raising $7.5 million in financing for the company.

    Celine Udriot, COO of Largo.ai, Sylvester Stallone, and Sami Arpa, CEO & co-founder of Largo.ai

    Celine Udriot, COO of Largo.ai, Sylvester Stallone, and Sami Arpa, CEO & co-founder of Largo.ai (Courtesy of Largo.ai)

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  • DeepSeek concerns prompt GOP lawmaker’s moves to crack down on China exports

    DeepSeek concerns prompt GOP lawmaker’s moves to crack down on China exports

    FIRST ON FOX: A top House Republican is moving to make it harder for China to procure advanced U.S. technology amid longstanding concerns about intellectual property theft by Beijing.

    “My proposed legislation will establish safeguards to prevent future shocks like China’s development of DeepSeek using American technology. In addition to the chips China reportedly stockpiled, it appears China used chips under the current export control threshold to achieve this AI breakthrough,” House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mark Green, R-Tenn., told Fox News Digital.

    “This scenario should be a wakeup call — if you give the CCP an inch, it will take a mile. The CCP’s craftiness is coupled with a total disregard for legal and security considerations. We already know that the CCP uses technology to oppress its own citizens and to commit acts of espionage and sabotage against the United States, including major cyberattacks.”

    SCOOP: KEY CONSERVATIVE CAUCUS DRAWS RED LINE ON HOUSE BUDGET PLAN

    U.S. officials are concerned about DeepSeek, a Chinese AI company with ties to the Chinese Communist Party, led by Chinese President Xi Jinping. (Getty Images | iStock)

    DeepSeek is an artificial intelligence (AI) software company based in Hangzhou, China. Its AI chatbot is known to be similar to ChatGPT, which was made by California-based OpenAI.

    DeepSeek’s release of the new high-profile AI model that costs less to run than existing models like those of Meta and OpenAI sent a chill through U.S. markets.

    BLACK CAUCUS CHAIR ACCUSES TRUMP OF ‘PURGE’ OF ‘MINORITY’ FEDERAL WORKERS

    Mark Green sits in committee

    House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Mark Green, R-Tenn., unveiled a bill to crack down on China’s ability to get U.S. tech. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite, File)

    Its popularity in U.S. app stores has also renewed concerns about Chinese companies collecting American data, as well as the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) censorship practices.

    The surprise DeepSeek release also displayed how China’s economic competitiveness has far outpaced the ability of U.S. business leaders and lawmakers to agree on what to do about it. 

    The U.S. Commerce Department is now looking into whether DeepSeek used chips that were banned from entering China via sanctions, Reuters reported. 

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    Green’s bill would put export controls on certain national interest technology and intellectual property to China.

    It would also call for sanctions against foreign actors who sell or purchase such items to and from China, as well as Chinese entities who knowingly use items covered by the export controls.

  • House lawmakers push to ban DeepSeek from US government devices

    House lawmakers push to ban DeepSeek from US government devices

    House lawmakers are introducing legislation Thursday to ban the Chinese AI DeepSeek from U.S. government devices, arguing that the software is “directly linked to the Chinese Communist Party” and poses a “five-alarm national security fire.” 

    The bipartisan legislation, titled “No DeepSeek on Government Devices Act,” is being led by Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., and Rep. Darin LaHood, R-Ill., who are both members of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. It comes after Congress banned TikTok on government devices during the Biden administration over similar data-sharing concerns. 

    The proposed ban is based on new research highlighting how “DeepSeek’s code is directly linked to the Chinese Communist Party, with the capability to share user data with China Mobile,” a company “owned by the Chinese government and with close ties to the Chinese military [that] has been banned by the Federal Communications Commission for use in the United States,” according to a statement from Gottheimer’s office. 

    “The Chinese Communist Party has made it abundantly clear that it will exploit any tool at its disposal to undermine our national security, spew harmful disinformation, and collect data on Americans. Now, we have deeply disturbing evidence that they are using DeepSeek to steal the sensitive data of U.S. citizens,” Gottheimer said. “This is a five-alarm national security fire.” 

    US REPORTEDLY INVESTIGATING WHETHER CHINA’S DEEPSEEK USED RESTRICTED AI CHIPS 

    House lawmakers are introducing legislation Thursday to ban DeepSeek from U.S. government devices, citing data-sharing concerns. (Avishek Das/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “The national security threat that DeepSeek — a CCP-affiliated company — poses to the United States is alarming. DeepSeek’s generative AI program acquires the data of U.S. users and stores the information for unidentified use by the CCP,” added LaHood. “Under no circumstances can we allow a CCP company to obtain sensitive government or personal data.” 

    DeepSeek did not immediately respond Thursday to a request for comment from FOX Business. 

    The research both lawmakers cited as allegedly exposing DeepSeek’s ties to the Chinese government was carried out by Feroot Security, a Canadian cybersecurity company, according to The Wall Street Journal. 

    TRUMP’S AI CZAR FLAGS REPORT QUESTIONING DEEPSEEK’S COST OF DEVELOPING AI MODELS 

    Rep. Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey

    Rep. Josh Gottheimer, D-N.J., is calling DeepSeek’s alleged ties to the Chinese Communist Party a “five-alarm national security fire.” (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    On the web version of DeepSeek, researchers found hidden code on the login page that has connections to computer infrastructure owned by China Mobile, the Associated Press reported. 

    “It’s hard to believe that something like this was accidental. There are so many unusual things to this. You know that saying ‘Where there’s smoke, there’s fire’? In this instance, there’s a lot of smoke,” Ivan Tsarynny, the CEO of Feroot Security, told the AP. 

    “The implications of this are significantly larger because personal and proprietary information could be exposed,” he added. “It’s like TikTok but at a much grander scale and with more precision. It’s not just sharing entertainment videos. It’s sharing queries and information that could include highly personal and sensitive business information.” 

    DeepSeek's AI chatbot

    The DeepSeek app is displayed on an iPhone screen on Jan. 27 in San Anselmo, Calif. The newly-launched Chinese AI app has surged to the top in Apple’s App Store. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

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    Gottheimer’s office said “Americans are sharing highly sensitive, proprietary information with DeepSeek — contracts, documents, and financial records,” and “In the wrong hands, this data is an enormous asset to the CCP, a known foreign adversary.” 

  • US reportedly investigating whether China’s DeepSeek used restricted AI chips

    US reportedly investigating whether China’s DeepSeek used restricted AI chips

    U.S. officials are investigating whether Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek, whose latest models sent the tech world into a frenzy this week, has been using advanced Nvidia semiconductors that are restricted from being shipped to China, according to multiple reports.

    DeepSeek’s release of new AI models that it claims rival those made by leading U.S. tech firms but at a fraction of the cost roiled markets on Monday and prompted concerns about American firms losing their edge in the AI race to Chinese rivals.

    A chatbot app developed by the Chinese AI company DeepSeek (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Reuters reported that, according to a person familiar, the Commerce Department is now probing whether DeepSeek was able to access AI chips that the U.S. has banned from Chinese access, adding that chip smuggling to China has been tracked out of countries including Malaysia, Singapore and the United Arab Emirates.

    Bloomberg also reported that the department is investigating whether DeepSeek was able to access high-performance Nvidia chips through third parties in Singapore.

    TECH MOGUL DOUBTS DEEPSEEK CLAIMS, SAYS US MEDIA FELL FOR ‘CCP PROPAGANDA’

    An Nvidia spokesperson told FOX Business that many of its customers have business entities in Singapore and use those entities for products destined for the U.S. and the west.

    The U.S. Commerce Department is reportedly probing whether DeepSeek accessed Nvidia chips prohibited for use in China.

    “Our public filings report ‘bill to’ not ‘ship to’ locations of our customers,” the spokesperson said in a statement. ” We insist that our partners comply with all applicable laws, and if we receive any information to the contrary, act accordingly.”

    The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to FOX Business’ request for comment. DeepSeek was unable to be reached for comment.

    NVIDIA CEO JENSES HUANG TO MEET WITH TRUMP AT WHITE HOUSE

    The reports come as President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at the White House on Friday.

    Huang and Trump are expected to discuss AI, as well as chips and the power needed to train AI models and semiconductor manufacturing facilities.

    Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang holds chip

    Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., holds up the company’s AI accelerator chips for data centers. (Akio Kon/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    DeepSeek has said it used Nvidia’s H800 chips, which it could have legally purchased in 2023. Reuters could not determine whether DeepSeek has used other controlled chips that are not allowed to be shipped to China.

    DeepSeek also apparently has Nvidia’s less powerful H20s, which can still lawfully be shipped to China. The U.S. considered controlling them under the Biden administration and newly appointed Trump officials are discussing that as well.

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    The CEO of AI company Anthropic, Dario Amodei, said earlier this week, “it appears that a substantial fraction of DeepSeek’s AI chip fleet consists of chips that haven’t been banned (but should be), chips that were shipped before they were banned; and some that seem very likely to have been smuggled.”

    The U.S. has put in place a raft of restrictions barring exports of AI chips to China and plans to cap their shipments to a host of other countries.

    FOX Business’ Eric Revell and Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Alibaba releases AI model it says rivals DeepSeek, OpenAI, Meta’s top models

    Alibaba releases AI model it says rivals DeepSeek, OpenAI, Meta’s top models

    Chinese tech giant Alibaba is flexing its muscles in the global race for artificial intelligence (AI) dominance, claiming the latest version of its Qwen 2.5 can take on the top models from rivals both foreign and domestic.

    Not to be outdone by the attention surrounding fellow Chinese firm DeepSeek – which rocked the U.S. tech sector this week with its purported emergence as a potential rival to leading American AI companies – Alibaba says its latest offering is superior to them all in nearly every measure.

    Alibaba claimed the latest version of its Qwen 2.5 can take on the top models from rivals both foreign and domestic. (Thomas Peter / Reuters Photos)

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    BABA ALIBABA GROUP HOLDING LTD. 97.98 +1.92 +1.99%

    Alibaba Holding Group Ltd — ADR

    “Qwen 2.5-Max outperforms… almost across the board GPT-4o, DeepSeek-V3 and Llama-3.1-405B,” Alibaba’s cloud unit said in an announcement posted on its official WeChat account, referring to OpenAI and Meta’s most advanced open-source AI models.

    TECH MOGUL DOUBTS DEEPSEEK CLAIMS, SAYS US MEDIA FELL FOR ‘CCP PROPAGANDA’

    Alibaba’s Qwen account on X posted stats indicating how the model stacks up against its competitors, claiming, “It achieves competitive performance against the top-tier models, and outcompetes DeepSeek V3 in benchmarks like Arena Hard, LiveBench, LiveCodeBench, GPQA-Diamond.”

    The unusual timing of the Qwen 2.5-Max’s release, on the first day of the Lunar New Year when most Chinese people are off work and with their families, points to the pressure Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s meteoric rise in the past three weeks has placed on not just overseas rivals, but also its domestic competition.

    TRUMP, OPENAI CEO WEIGH IN ON DEEPSEEK FRENZY

    The Jan. 10 release of DeepSeek’s AI assistant, powered by the DeepSeek-V3 model, as well as the Jan. 20 release of its R1 model, has shocked Silicon Valley and caused tech shares to plunge, with the Chinese startup’s purportedly low development and usage costs prompting investors to question huge spending plans by leading AI firms in the U.S.

    But DeepSeek’s success has also led to a scramble among its domestic competitors to upgrade their own AI models.

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    Two days after the release of DeepSeek-R1, TikTok owner ByteDance released an update to its flagship AI model, which it claimed outperformed Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s o1 in AIME, a benchmark test that measures how well AI models understand and respond to complex instructions.

    This echoed DeepSeek’s claim that its R1 model rivaled OpenAI’s o1 on several performance benchmarks.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Fox News AI Newsletter: DeepSeek underscores US-China race for AI dominance, OpenAI says

    Fox News AI Newsletter: DeepSeek underscores US-China race for AI dominance, OpenAI says

    Welcome to Fox News’ Artificial Intelligence newsletter with the latest AI technology advancements.

    IN TODAY’S NEWSLETTER:

    – DeepSeek is the newest front in the AI competition between the US and China

    – Trump, OpenAI CEO weigh in on DeepSeek frenzy

    – Willing to pay $175,000 for a life-size robot friend that remembers everything about you?

    CRITICAL FIGHT: DeepSeek’s release of a high-profile new AI model underscores a point we at OpenAI have been making for quite some time: the U.S. is in a competition with the Chinese Communist Party that will determine whether democratic AI wins over the Chinese Communist Party’s authoritarian version of the technology. The U.S. must come out on top–and the stakes could not be higher.

    ‘WAKE-UP CALL’: President Donald Trump and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman both joined in on the buzz surrounding Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek, which sent the technology sector into turmoil on Monday following its emergence as a potential rival to leading U.S.-based firms.

    melody the robot 1

    Melody the life-sized AI robot  (Realbotix)

    ROBOT FRIEND MELODY: In a world where loneliness is becoming increasingly prevalent, researchers have taken a bold step forward by introducing Melody, a life-sized artificial intelligence robot designed to combat this growing epidemic. 

    AI RACE: China-based artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek’s release of new AI models that rival those made by leading U.S. tech firms roiled markets on Monday and prompted concerns about U.S. firms losing their edge in the AI race to Chinese rivals.

    ROBOTIC DOG COMPANION: U.S. robotics company Tombot has introduced “Jennie,” an innovative AI-powered robotic pet designed to provide comfort and companionship to those facing cognitive health challenges.

    Jennie the AI dog 1

    AI-powered robotic dog  (Tombot)

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  • DeepSeek fallout: GOP Sen Josh Hawley seeks to cut off all US-China collaboration on AI development

    DeepSeek fallout: GOP Sen Josh Hawley seeks to cut off all US-China collaboration on AI development

    FIRST ON FOX: This week the U.S. tech sector was routed by the Chinese launch of DeepSeek, and Sen. Josh Hawley is putting forth legislation to prevent that from happening again. 

    Hawley’s bill, the Decoupling America’s Artifical Intelligence Capabilities from China Act, would cut off U.S.-China cooperation on AI. It would ban exports or imports of AI technology from China, ban American companies from conducting research there, and prohibit any U.S. investment in AI tech companies in China. 

    “Every dollar and gig of data that flows into Chinese AI are dollars and data that will ultimately be used against the United States,” said Hawley, R-Mo., in a statement. “America cannot afford to empower our greatest adversary.”

    His is one of the first bills introduced directly in response to the DeepSeek market shakeup of the past few days.

    THERE IS A ‘WAKE-UP CALL’ FOR US TO BE THE LEADER IN AI, SAYS WHITE HOUSE AI AND CRYPTO ‘CZAR’ 

    Sen. Josh Hawley has introduced a bill to cut off U.S.-China cooperation on artificial intelligence. (C-Span)

    DeepSeek’s release of a new high-profile AI model that costs less to run than existing models like those of Meta and OpenAI sent a chill through U.S. markets, with chipmaker Nvidia stocks tanking on Monday before slowly gaining ground again on Tuesday. 

    The surprise release displayed how China’s economic competitiveness has far outpaced the ability of U.S. business leaders and lawmakers to agree on what to do about it. 

    Unlike other legislation to thwart China’s profiting off U.S. innovation, Hawley’s bill would cover any AI-related technology instead of specific entities, which has prompted the Chinese to seek out loopholes through other companies. 

    TRUMP’S AI ‘DECLARATION’ REMINISCENT OF JFK PLEDGE TO PUT A MAN ON THE MOON: FORMER WHITE HOUSE IT OFFICIAL 

    Microsoft and OpenAI are now reportedly investigating whether DeepSeek could have accessed and used their data to train its own Chinese model, Bloomberg News reported. 

    White House artificial intelligence czar David Sacks told Fox News there is “substantial evidence that what DeepSeek did here is they distilled the knowledge out of OpenAI’s models.” 

    The U.S. and China flags

    The U.S. and China are engaged in an AI race, and until recently the U.S. was thought to be slightly ahead. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato)

    President Donald Trump on Monday said DeepSeek’s arrival on the scene “should be a wakeup call” for America’s tech companies after the new low-cost AI assistant soared to number one on the Apple app store over the weekend. 

    “The release of DeepSeek AI from a Chinese company should be a wake-up call for our industries that we need to be laser focused on competing,” Trump said. 

    But the president said it was ultimately a good thing if the world had access to cheaper, faster AI models. “​​Instead of spending billions and billions, you’ll spend less, and you’ll come up with, hopefully, the same solution,” Trump said.

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    In his final week in office, President Joe Biden issued a rule slapping export controls on AI chips, with his national security advisor, Jake Sullivan, arguing that the U.S. was only six to 18 months ahead of China in the AI sector. 

    U.S. officials are now looking at the national security implications of DeepSeek, according to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, who added that the Trump administration was working to “ensure American AI dominance.”

  • Tech mogul doubts DeepSeek claims, says US media fell for ‘CCP propaganda’

    Tech mogul doubts DeepSeek claims, says US media fell for ‘CCP propaganda’

    American entrepreneur Palmer Luckey is not buying a lot of the hype this week over Chinese startup DeepSeek’s artificial intelligence (AI) models and accused the U.S. media of “mindlessly” reporting the company’s claims.

    In an exclusive interview Tuesday on FOX Business’ “The Claman Countdown,” Luckey pointed to the widespread reporting on how DeepSeek said it spent only $5 million to train an AI model that is purportedly competitive with some AI models developed in America that cost billions. 

    Palmer Luckey, founder of Anduril Industries, during an interview on “The Circuit with Emily Chang” at Anduril’s headquarters in Costa Mesa, Calif., Dec. 14, 2023.  (Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Luckey, who sold Oculus to Facebook for billions of dollars and is the founder of defense firm Anduril, noted DeepSeek did not release the full costs of both models it developed, and he accused the media of ignoring that a significant portion of the AI startup’s infrastructure costs are still unknown.

    DEEPSEEK IS THE NEWEST FRONT IN THE AI COMPETITION BETWEEN THE US AND CHINA

    “I think the problem is they put out that number specifically to harm U.S. companies,” Luckey said. “You had a lot of useful idiots in U.S. media kind of just mindlessly reporting that that’s the case, and neither China nor the media nor DeepSeek has any kind of incentive to correct the record as a lot of U.S. companies like Nvidia crashed to the tunes of hundreds of billions of dollars.”

    DeepSeek's AI chatbot

    Newly launched Chinese AI app DeepSeek has surged to No. 1 in Apple’s App Store, triggering a sell-off of U.S. tech stocks over concerns that Chinese companies’ AI advances could threaten the bottom line of tech giants in the U.S. and Europe. (Photo Illustration by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    TRUMP, OPENAI CEO WEIGH IN ON DEEPSEEK FRENZY

    DeepSeek’s model appears able to match the capability of chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Meta’s Llama but at a fraction of the development cost. It also rose to No. 1 on the Apple App Store over the weekend and is reportedly able to use reduced-capability chips from Nvidia.

    Those revelations slammed the U.S. tech sector Monday.

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    NVDA NVIDIA CORP. 128.86 +10.44 +8.82%
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    Luckey did concede that DeepSeek has made impressive strides and innovations in AI but warned against buying too much into what the company is reporting.

    “I don’t think that people should take what they’re saying at face value, and they should realize that there are a lot of people cheering for the United States to fail,” he said. “There’s people who are clearly cheering for our tech companies to fail and, obviously, President Trump to fail. It’s a shame that so many of them are in the United States.

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    “There’s a reason they put out the news that way, and if the stock market is any indication, it’s accomplishing exactly what they hoped to,” Luckey added. “So, look, we can recognize that Chinese AI is a real competitive threat without losing our minds over it and falling for CCP [Chinese Communist Party] propaganda.”

    FOX Business’ Suzanne O’Halloran contributed to this report.

  • US reportedly investigating whether China’s DeepSeek used restricted AI chips

    DeepSeek is the newest front in the AI competition between the US and China

    DeepSeek’s release of a high-profile new AI model underscores a point we at OpenAI have been making for quite some time: the U.S. is in a competition with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) that will determine whether democratic AI wins over the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) authoritarian version of the technology. The U.S. must come out on top–and the stakes could not be higher. 

    As President Donald Trump rightly said on Monday, DeepSeek “should be a wake-up call for our industries that we need to be laser-focused on competing to win.” 

    We couldn’t agree more.

    For those familiar with AI and how the models get built, it wasn’t a huge surprise that someone was able to replicate parts of OpenAI’s o1 model several months after it was released. What’s notable is that it was not an American one that did so. 

    THE DEEPSEEK AI CHATBOT BURST ONTO THE SCENE: ARE FEARS ABOUT IT OVERBLOWN?

    CCP leader Xi Jinping has made clear China wants to be the dominant player in AI by 2030, and the country is plowing enormous amounts of money into the AI infrastructure to compete with the U.S. They’re giving developers unfettered access to data; building enormous amounts of energy (ten nuclear facilities came online last year with another ten on course for this year); and are seeking to develop their own chip-manufacturing capabilities. 

    Though I suspect we will learn more about DeepSeek’s work that may ultimately impact how we understand the state of their technology (experts are already noticing that their system is slower to respond to user requests than other models), how new it actually is (some users have pointed out that the DeepSeek model says that it’s ChatGPT when asked), and what it cost (projects in of authoritarian countries have a tendency to be opaque), this weekend’s news shows that the CCP is all-in on the AI competition. 

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI APP DEEPSEEK?

    It’s important to understand that the stock market panic over the release of DeepSeek’s R1 model is missing the big picture: when AI systems grow more efficient, we need more of the infrastructure that powers those tools, not less. 

    Think of it this way: in post-WWII America, just because companies in the U.S. and abroad designed more affordable cars over time did not mean that we stopped building highways. If anything, it made highways more valuable because people can travel farther and faster than they could before. In fact, the U.S. went big and built out the interstate highway system.

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    The same holds true with AI. More efficient models make computers more valuable than ever because we can achieve significantly greater outcomes with the same hardware, as President Trump noted in his remarks about DeepSeek on Monday. 

    Scaling up our AI infrastructure will scale up our AI capabilities, powering bigger breakthroughs than would have been imaginable even a few months ago in everything from healthcare and biotech to energy and national security.

    Moreover, the most pressing issue in AI is the push towards AGI and superintelligence, which is the evolution of the technology to a point where it is able to help humans solve problems in science, health, and education that just a short time ago would have seemed like a miracle. This is the Super Bowl of AI, and the U.S. has to lead if we want to maximize the technology’s economic gains and ensure the world’s AI is built on democratic values. 

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    The road to AGI and superintelligence requires investing in supercomputers, data centers, advanced chips, power generation facilities, transmission lines, human talent, and other key parts of the AI ecosystem. That’s the mission of the Stargate Project, the new venture that we unveiled at the White House last week that will immediately invest an initial $100 billion in new infrastructure, with activity already in the works on the ground in Texas. When it comes to accelerating the construction of democratic AI that can prevail over authoritarian AI, Stargate is a 21st century version of World War II’s Arsenal of Democracy. 

    Let’s make sure we understand the game being played, the nature of our competitors, and the stakes. If we do not accelerate our AI infrastructure build-out now, we’re effectively handing the future to the CCP. 

    The stakes are too high to let short-sighted market narratives or misinformation dictate our path. The game is on, and we need to play to win.

    Chris Lehane is Chief Global Affairs Officer at OpenAI. Before joining OpenAI, he was Chief Strategy Officer and Operating Partner at Haun Ventures and previously led policy and communications at Airbnb from 2015 to 2021. He also co-founded a strategic consultancy, held various roles in the Clinton administration, and currently serves on Coinbase’s Board of Directors.

  • Trump, Open AI CEO Sam Altman on Chinese AI startup DeepSeek

    Trump, Open AI CEO Sam Altman on Chinese AI startup DeepSeek

    President Donald Trump and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman both joined in on the buzz surrounding Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) startup DeepSeek, which sent the technology sector into turmoil on Monday following its emergence as a potential rival to leading U.S.-based firms.

    The president said the release of the lower-cost, high-performance AI models from a Chinese firm “should be a wake-up call,” while Altman conceded that DeepSeek’s R1 model was “impressive” – and vowed OpenAI will deliver models that are superior.

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman (R), accompanied by President Donald Trump, speaks during a news conference in the Roosevelt Room of the White House on Jan. 21, 2025, in Washington, DC.  ((Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images) / Getty Images)

    “Hopefully the release of DeepSeek AI from a Chinese company should be a wake-up call for our industries that we need to be laser focused on competing to win, because we have the greatest scientists in the world,” Trump told House Republicans on Monday night in Doral, Florida, during a speech at their annual retreat.

    THE DEEPSEEK AI CHATBOT BURST ONTO THE SCENE: ARE FEARS ABOUT IT OVERBLOWN?

    However, the president said the revelation that DeepSeek has developed a way to produce AI models at a much lower cost than other U.S. models “could be very much a positive development.”

    Trump inaugural address

    President Donald Trump spoke at the House Republicans’ annual retreat on Monday night. (CHIP SOMODEVILLA/POOL/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “Instead of spending billions and billions, you’ll spend less and you’ll come up with hopefully the same solution under the Trump administration,” Trump continued, adding, “We’re going to unleash our tech companies and we’re going to dominate the future like never before.”

    WHAT IS CHINESE AI STARTUP DEEPSEEK?

    Altman, whose company created the popular ChatGPT models, took to X to give his take, writing, “deepseek’s r1 is an impressive model, particularly around what they’re able to deliver for the price.”

    The OpenAI CEO went on to say, “We will obviously deliver much better models and also it’s legit invigorating to have a new competitor!”

    The quality of DeepSeek’s models and its reported cost efficiency have changed the narrative that China’s AI firms are trailing their U.S. counterparts, which began after the first Chinese ChatGPT equivalent was released by Baidu. 

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    The DeepSeek-R1 model was released last week and is 20 to 50 times cheaper to use than OpenAI’s o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on the company’s official WeChat account.

    The R1 model is also open source and available to users for free, while OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pro Plan costs $200 per month.

    American tech leaders are taking notice. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg pointed to DeepSeek during an interview on “The Joe Rogan Experience,” saying the company’s models show how competitive the AI race has become, and stressed the importance of the industry having support from the federal government.

    “We should want the American model to win,” Zuckerberg told host Joe Rogan.

    “I think it’s easy for the government to take for granted that the U.S. will lead on these things,” Zuckerberg said. “But I think it’s a very close competition, and we need the help. We need them to not be a force that’s making it harder for us to do these things.”

    FOX Business’ Eric Revell and Reuters contributed to this report.