DeepSeek is back in the game, folks! After hitting the pause button for nearly three weeks, the AI wunderkind has reopened access to its core programming interface. Why the hiatus? Well, let’s just say their servers were feeling the heat—turns out, when you create an AI model that gives ChatGPT a run for its money, everyone and all the tech giants, startups, and probably a few overambitious hobbyists want a piece of it. The company had to temporarily halt credit top-ups in early February because, well, even AI needs a breather sometimes. But fear not! Top-ups are back, though DeepSeek warns that daytime server traffic might still feel like rush hour.
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Meanwhile, over in Alibaba-land, the e-commerce titan is flexing its AI muscles with the launch of QwQ-Max, its latest brainchild. And in true “go big or go home” fashion, Alibaba announced it’s open-sourcing the model.This move cranks up the heat in China’s AI kitchen, where DeepSeek, Baidu, and other players are already scrambling to out-cook each other. Oh, and did we mention Alibaba’s $53 billion investment in cloud and AI infrastructure? Yeah, they’re not messing around.
DeepSeek’s rise has been nothing short of a tech Cinderella story. Since debuting its ChatGPT rival last month, the 20-month-old startup has become the talk of the town, sending stocks in mainland China and Hong Kong on a joyride. Companies across industries are clamoring to integrate its AI models, proving that innovation doesn’t always come with a Silicon Valley price tag. But it’s not all sunshine and rainbows—governments from the U.S. to Australia are side-eyeing DeepSeek over security concerns. Because, you know, nothing says “global rivalry” like a good old-fashioned AI arms race.
DeepSeek recently announced plans to release key code and data to the public. That’s right—they’re sharing more of their secret sauce than OpenAI ever has. It’s a bold move that could either spark a new wave of collaboration or turn the U.S.-China AI race into a full-blown sprint.
Here’s what it means for you:
Source; Bloomberg, Economic Times.
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