DeepSeek, a mobile AI application developed by a Chinese company, has surpassed OpenAI's ChatGPT to become the top free app on the iPhone charts in both China and the United States. This achievement comes shortly after the company launched its \"reasoning model,\" DeepSeek R1.
When users activate the \"DeepThink (R1)\" mode, the app displays its \"thinking process\" before providing responses, enabling it to tackle complex logical and mathematical problems. According to DeepSeek's official website, the R1 model's performance is \"on par with\" OpenAI-o1, while its operational costs are approximately one-thirtieth of its rival's.
The mobile app and web chatbot are currently free for general use, with payment required only for API calls by programmers. Additionally, DeepSeek has made its full-size model available for free download, allowing users with sufficient hardware to run it locally. For those with less powerful devices, the company offers scaled-down versions of the model, optimized for everything from ultra-thin laptops to high-performance gaming rigs.
Beyond providing free access to its models, DeepSeek has also published a research paper detailing the development of R1, enabling other developers to replicate the process using their own training data.
The AI Community Reacts
The release of the R1 model has sent ripples through the AI industry, drawing reactions from prominent figures.
Venture capitalist and Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen described DeepSeek R1 on X.com as \"one of the most amazing and impressive breakthroughs\" he has ever seen, calling it \"a profound gift to the world.\"
Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas noted that \"DeepSeek has largely replicated OpenAI-o1-mini and has open-sourced it.\"
Nvidia's senior research manager Jim Fan remarked that DeepSeek is a \"non-U.S. company\" upholding OpenAI's original mission of conducting \"truly open, frontier research that empowers all.\"
Yann LeCun, Meta's chief AI scientist, emphasized that DeepSeek's success does not signify \"China surpassing the U.S. in AI,\" but rather highlights how \"open-source models are surpassing proprietary ones.\"
Former president of Google China, Kai-Fu Lee, expressed a sense of vindication, saying that the DeepSeek releases validate his belief in China's potential to excel in generative AI engineering, despite skepticism from others.
DeepSeek's Vision for Innovation
In a July 2024 interview with 36kr.com, DeepSeek CEO Liang Wenfeng argued that China must move beyond the stereotype of merely applying U.S. innovations. As the country's economy grows, he said, it should transition into a global contributor to innovation rather than relying on the advancements of others.
Liang emphasized that innovation stems not only from the pursuit of business success but also from genuine curiosity. He also revealed that the DeepSeek team is composed of young talent and that the development of the company's earlier V2 model did not involve any overseas contributors.
\"Perhaps the top 50 talents in this field are not in China,\" Liang told 36kr.com. \"But we can cultivate our own.\"
Reference(s):
cgtn.com