By Malay Mail
NEW YORK, Dec 23 β Even as the United States is embarked on a bitter rivalry with China over the deployment of artificial intelligence, Chinese technology is quietly making inroads into the US market.
Despite considerable geopolitical tensions, Chinese open-source AI models are winning over a growing number of programmers and companies in the United States.
These are different from the closed generative AI models that have become household names β ChatGPT-maker OpenAI or Googleβs Gemini β whose inner workings are fiercely protected.
In contrast, βopenβ models offered by many Chinese rivals, from Alibaba to DeepSeek, allow programmers to customise parts of the software to suit their needs.
Globally, use of Chinese-developed open models has surged from just 1.2 per cent in late 2024 to nearly 30 per cent in August, according to a report published this month by the developersβ platform OpenRouter and US venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz.
Chinaβs open-source models βare cheap β in some cases free β and they work well,β Wang Wen, dean of the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies at Renmin University of China told AFP.
One American entrepreneur, speaking on condition of anonymity, said their business saves US$400,000 annually by using Alibabaβs Qwen AI models instead of the proprietary models.
βIf you need cutting-edge capabilities, you go back to OpenAI, Anthropic or Google, but most applications donβt need that,β said the entrepreneur.
US chip titan Nvidia, AI firm Perplexity and Californiaβs Stanford University are also using Qwen models in some of their work.
DeepSeek shock
The January launch of DeepSeekβs high-performance, low-cost and open source βR1β large language model (LLM) defied the perception that the best AI tech had to be from US juggernauts like OpenAI, Anthropic or Google.
It was also a reckoning for the United States β locked in a battle for dominance in AI tech with China β on how far its archrival had come.

DeepSeekβs R1 launch in January challenged the idea that AI supremacy belongs to US juggernauts. β AFP pic
AI models from Chinaβs MiniMax and Z.ai are also popular overseas, and the country has entered the race to build AI agents β programmes that use chatbots to complete online tasks like buying tickets or adding events to a calendar.
Agent friendly β and open-source β models, like the latest version of the Kimi K2 model from the startup Moonshot AI, released in November, are widely considered the next frontier in the generative AI revolution.
The US government is aware of open-sourceβs potential.
In July, the Trump administration released an βAI Action Planβ that said America needed βleading open models founded on American valuesβ.
These could become global standards, it said.
But so far US companies are taking the opposite track.
Meta, which had led the countryβs open-source efforts with its Llama models, is now concentrating on closed-source AI instead.
However, this summer, OpenAI β under pressure to revive the spirit of its origin as a nonprofit β released two βopen-weightβ models (slightly less malleable than βopen-sourceβ).
βBuild trustβ
Among major Western companies, only Franceβs Mistral is sticking with open-source, but it ranks far behind DeepSeek and Qwen in usage rankings.
Western open-source offerings are βjust not as interesting,β said the US entrepreneur who uses Alibabaβs Qwen.
The Chinese government has encouraged open-source AI technology, despite questions over its profitability.
Mark Barton, chief technology officer at OMNIUX, said he was considering using Qwen but some of his clients could be uncomfortable with the idea of interacting with Chinese-made AI, even for specific tasks.
Given the current US administrationβs stance on Chinese tech companies, risks remain, he told AFP.
βWe wouldnβt want to go all-in with one specific model provider, especially one thatβs maybe not aligned with Western ideas,β said Barton.
βIf Alibaba were to get sanctioned or usage was effectively blacklisted, we donβt want to get caught in that trap.β
But Paul Triolo, a partner at DGA-Albright Stonebridge Group, said there were no βsalient issuesβ surrounding data security.
βCompanies can choose to use the models and build on them...without any connection to China,β he explained.
A recent Stanford study published posited that βthe very nature of open-model releases enables better scrutinyβ of the tech.
Gao Fei, chief technology officer at Chinese AI wellness platform BOK Health, agrees.
βThe transparency and sharing nature of open source are themselves the best ways to build trust,β he said. β AFP
Source: open-source-open-doors-how-chinese-ai-is-quietly-gaining-ground-in-the-us-despite-bitter-rivalry
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