Deepseek's logo. (Photo: REUTERS/TTXVN)
In the context of artificial intelligence (AI) "giants" such as OpenAI, Google or Anthropic dominating the market, a new name from China - DeepSeek - has caught the attention of the entire technology industry.
With the R1 model, DeepSeek not only breaks the monopoly of the "big guys" but also raises a big question: Is AI still a playground reserved for trillion-dollar corporations?
Since late 2022, AI assistants such as ChatGPT (by OpenAI), Claude (by Anthropic) or Gemini (by Google) have dominated the market thanks to huge investments in engineering teams, data centers and advanced AI chips.
However, DeepSeek unexpectedly entered the race with the groundbreaking R1 model with a development cost of only 6 million USD - a shocking number compared to the billions of USD of its competitors.
Although many experts have expressed doubts about the true cost of DeepSeek, the emergence of this model still raises debates: Is AI becoming a common commodity, instead of a high-end technology reserved only for giant corporations?
“First movers in this space have to spend a lot to get ahead,” said Angelo Zino, an analyst at research firm CFRA. “But the ‘newcomers’ who follow can do the same thing cheaper and faster.”
At the HumanX AI conference in Las Vegas last week, Thomas Wolf, co-founder of Hugging Face, a company that develops computational tools to build machine learning applications, said that the cost of developing AI is decreasing, and more importantly, users are no longer too concerned about which model they are using.
“We are entering a multi-model world and that is a good thing,” Wolf commented, pointing to the market’s relatively muted reaction to the latest version of ChatGPT.
However, OpenAI does not easily accept this view. Mr. Kevin Weil - OpenAI's product manager - asserts that not all AI models are the same.
“We may not have the 12-month lead we had before, but a three- to six-month lead is still valuable,” he said. With more than 400 million users, OpenAI has the advantage of collecting massive amounts of data to continuously improve its models.
Mr. Fen Zhao - Research Director at Alpha Edison, compared OpenAI with Google, when both have become too familiar names in the minds of users.
Improvements in chip technology and algorithm optimization have helped drive down the cost of AI development, but the race is still capital-intensive. Open-source models are driving faster innovation, but closed-loop companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are facing enormous financial pressure.
In February, Japanese investment firm SoftBank poured $40 billion into OpenAI, raising the company’s valuation to $300 billion, nearly double that of last year. But with OpenAI burning through $1 billion a month, it still needs to raise money.
Meanwhile, Anthropic is not to be outdone, having just raised $3.5 billion in March, reaching a valuation of $61.5 billion.
“If you’re spending $1 billion a month, you’re going to have to keep raising money,” said Jai Das of Sapphire Ventures. “I don’t see them getting to profitability any time soon beyond that level of spending.”
With the rise of new forces like DeepSeek and the gradual shift to a multi-model AI world, the future picture of the AI industry is changing every day.
The race is no longer just about the big guys "burning money" to gain the upper hand, but is opening up opportunities for smarter, more flexible competitors./.
Source: https://www.vietnamplus.vn/tri-tue-nhan-tao-khi-deepseek-dinh-hinh-lai-the-co-post1020961.vnp
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