02/05 2025
420
Tech-savvy netizens are undoubtedly aware that this Spring Festival did not see China's Spring Festival Gala making global waves but rather a Chinese AI large model enterprise, Deepseek.
Deepseek has shaken the entire US AI community and even dragged down the US technology industry. Despite lacking a significant number of AI chips, having just 2 months to develop, incurring less than one-tenth of OpenAI's training cost, and being composed entirely of Chinese local graduates, Deepseek's AI large model has outperformed OpenAI.
Consequently, DeepSeek's global popularity has sparked collective panic among mainstream US tech companies. Against this backdrop, the US has once again resorted to 'dirty tactics,' aiming to encircle and suppress Deepseek globally.
Firstly, OpenAI's CEO, Sam Altman, began questioning whether Deepseek plagiarized OpenAI, remarking that 'plagiarism is easier than innovation.' Additionally, Mark Chan, OpenAI's Chief Researcher, claimed that Deepseek 'independently discovered the technical method of o1,' implying plagiarism nonetheless.
Microsoft has also launched an investigation into Deepseek, suspecting that it distilled data from the OpenAI model to achieve such results.
Certain relevant US departments believe that the AI chip ban is insufficient and plan to control the previously exportable H20, preventing Deepseek from obtaining any AI chips from the US.
Simultaneously, Deepseek has begun to record numerous attacks originating from US IP addresses, while some US official institutions have banned the use of Deepseek.
It is evident that various 'conspiracies' aimed at Deepseek continue to emerge, all attempting to encircle and suppress it from different angles, hoping to stall its further development.
This incident also reveals a stark fact: the US has become accustomed to enforcing its technological hegemony by creating and maintaining resource inequality. Whenever any country or region surpasses them in certain fields, they resort to suppressing them through various illegal means rather than competing through technological innovation.
This was the case with Huawei in the past, followed by TikTok, and now Deepseek. Despite the US's wishes being thwarted time and again, they have yet to learn from their mistakes. They still stubbornly believe that only their banning methods are wrong, refusing to seek reasons within their own technological innovation.