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DeepSeek just flipped the AI script in favor of open-source—and the irony for OpenAI and Anthropic is brutal

DeepSeek, the Chinese AI startup, shocked the world after unveiling an AI model last week that rivals leading models like OpenAI’s o1, while claiming it cost far less to develop and required far fewer Nvidia chips—and giving it away for free. The fallout sent Nvidia’s stock plummeting today and left observers wondering: What does it mean for the most deep-pocketed AI startups, OpenAI and Anthropic, which sell their models to consumers and companies, as well as highly funded competitors like Mistral and Cohere?

The current moment is deeply ironic, Toronto-based AI developer and consultant Reuven Cohen told Fortune. DeepSeek released its AI model as open-source, meaning the company allowed researchers, developers, and other users to access the underlying code and its “weights” (which determine how the model processes information) to use, modify, or improve. That sounds a lot like what OpenAI said it would do when it was founded in 2015 as a nonprofit company that shared its research and techniques openly (as its name suggests). But OpenAI is now “by far, the most closed in every way possible,” Cohen said.

Though DeepSeek did not release the data it used to train its R1 model, there are indications that it may have used outputs from OpenAI’s o1 to kick-start the training of the model’s reasoning abilities. This process of analyzing and learning from another model’s outputs is sometimes referred to as “reverse engineering.”

Open-source developers have been reverse-engineering OpenAI models like o1 for months, Cohen said. DeepSeek’s efforts make it clear that models can self-improve by learning from other models released by OpenAI, Anthropic, and others—which puts those companies’ existing business models, cost structures, and technological assumptions at risk.

“The problem is that the companies have momentary advantages but haven’t built durable moats,” said Patrick Moorhead, founder of Moor Insights & Strategy. “Companies with proprietary leanings need a scale, time to market, cost, or 5X utility advantage to be successful. Both OpenAI and Anthropic are being outmaneuvered by open [source AI].”

Many proponents of open-source AI have long predicted the commoditization of AI models. “If these models turn out to be pretty capable, which they really are looking like, and they’re very cheap, then there’s a world where companies stop using OpenAI at scale,” said William Falcon, CEO of Lightning AI, a software platform that allows users to train and deploy open-source AI models, including DeepSeek’s.


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