Sam Altman, CEO of Openai, said the company had no plans to complain about Dipsic’s artificial intelligence startup. Previously, Deepseek apparently used the knowledge of Openai models.
The Chinese Dip -Sick startup has recently been able to challenge the Silicon Valley giants. The startup, which stepped into the billion -dollar competition with Deepseek, claims that their product is expanding at a much lower cost than its competitors and can provide its own billion -dollar competitors’ performance.
Deepsic has been accused of stealing Western artificial intelligence technologies
“No, we have no plans to complain to Deepseek,” Sam Altman, who has now traveled to Japan, told reporters about a possible complaint from Deepseek. We only continue to build excellent products and leadership of the world with modeling. I think this is doing well. “
Altman also praised Dipsic’s performance, saying Openai would continue to advance and supply great products and is happy to have a new competitor.
At the same time as the stunning growth and development of Dipsic, some sources claimed that the Chinese company has stolen some technologies and hardware from Western rivals. Openai also warned last week that Chinese competitors were trying to copy advanced models of artificial intelligence.
Openai also said the company’s competitors are using a trick called “distillation” to develop their artificial intelligence models. In this way, developers who make smaller models learn by copying behavior and decision -making patterns from larger models. This process is similar to the student learning mechanism from his teacher.
Deepseek’s nationality and its servers in China have created a lot of uncertainty about the privacy status of users. The US Navy has recently banned the use of this artificial intelligence by the forces. US lawmakers are also seeking a law that prohibits the use of Deepsic for the people of the country, and even a fine of five years in prison for offenders.
RCO NEWS