中国大模型DeepSeek突然火爆全网
(2025-01-27 22:21:14)几乎是一夜之间,“来自东方的神秘力量”又一次震撼海外人士心脏。
DeepSeek: Chinese AI chatbot
sparks market turmoil for rivals
Peter Hoskins & Imran Rahman-Jones
The surge in popularity of Chinese artificial intelligence
(AI) app DeepSeek has sparked a selloff of shares in major tech
companies after it overtook rivals such as ChatGPT to become the
top-rated free app on Apple's App Store.
Nvidia, Microsoft and Meta were set to open down on Monday and
the development knocked European share prices.
The app has grown in popularity since its launch, challenging
the widely held belief that the US is the unassailable leader in AI
and prompting questions about the scale of investments US firms are
planning.
It is powered by the open-source DeepSeek-V3 model, which its
researchers claim was developed for less than $6m - significantly
less than the billions spent by rivals.
But this claim has been disputed by others in the AI
space.
DeepSeek's emergence comes as the US is restricting the sale
of the advanced chip technology that powers AI to China.
To continue their work without steady supplies of imported
advanced chips, Chinese AI developers have shared their work with
each other and experimented with new approaches to the
technology.
This has resulted in AI models that require far less computing
power than before. It also means that they cost a lot less than
previously thought possible, which has the potential to upend the
industry.
After DeepSeek-R1 was launched earlier this month, the company
boasted of "performance on par with" one of ChatGPT maker OpenAI's
latest models - when used for tasks such as maths, coding and
natural language reasoning.
Silicon Valley venture capitalist and Donald Trump advisor
Marc Andreessen described DeepSeek-R1 as "AI's Sputnik moment", a
reference to the satellite launched by the Soviet Union in
1957.
At the time, the US was considered to have been caught
off-guard by their rival's technological achievement.
DeepSeek's popularity has startled markets. ASML, the Dutch
chip equipment maker, saw its share price tumble by more than 10%
while shares in Siemens Energy, which makes hardware related to AI,
plunged by 21%.
"This idea of a low-cost Chinese version hasn't necessarily
been forefront, so it's taken the market a little bit by surprise,"
said Fiona Cincotta, senior market analyst at City Index.
"So if you suddenly get this low-cost AI model, then that's
going to raise concerns over the profits of rivals, particularly
given the amount that they've already invested in more expensive AI
infrastructure."
And Singapore-based technology equity advisor Vey-Sern Ling
told the BBC it could "potentially derail the investment case for
the entire AI supply chain".
But Wall Street banking giant Citi cautioned that while
DeepSeek could challenge the dominant positions of American
companies such as OpenAI, issues faced by Chinese firms could
hamper their development.
"We estimate that in an inevitably more restrictive
environment, US access to more advanced chips is an advantage," its
analysts said in a report.
Last week, a consortium of US tech firms and foreign investors
announced The Stargate Project, a company which is putting $500bn
into AI infrastructure in Texas.
Who founded DeepSeek?
The company was founded in 2023 by Liang Wenfeng in Hangzhou,
a city in southeastern China.
The 40-year-old, an information and electronic engineering
graduate, also founded the hedge fund that backed DeepSeek.
He reportedly built up a store of Nvidia A100 chips, now
banned from export to China. Experts believe this collection -
which some estimates put at 50,000 - led him to launch DeepSeek, by
pairing these chips with cheaper, lower-end ones that are still
available to import.
Mr Liang was recently seen at a meeting between industry
experts and the Chinese premier Li Qiang.
In a July 2024 interview with The China Academy, Mr Liang said
he was surprised by the reaction to the previous version of his AI
model.
"We didn't expect pricing to be such a sensitive issue," he
said.
"We were simply following our own pace, calculating costs, and
setting prices accordingly."