Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Why I invested in Elon Musk’s SpaceX — The Barefoot Investor

    June 15, 2026

    Peggy Flanagan, Angie Craig ‘Get Ugly’ In Minnesota Senate Fight

    June 15, 2026

    How to Get Stains Out of Tupperware

    June 15, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Why I invested in Elon Musk’s SpaceX — The Barefoot Investor
    • Peggy Flanagan, Angie Craig ‘Get Ugly’ In Minnesota Senate Fight
    • How to Get Stains Out of Tupperware
    • What Sock Marks On Your Legs Could Reveal About Your Health
    • How to implement it to boost answer engine visibility in 2026
    • New Town Spares – Company Profile
    • Smart Investors vs. Dumb Investors
    • Trump Is Trying To Bury His UFC ‘Failure’ By Striking A ‘Bad Deal’ To End Iran War, GOP Strategist Says
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    SBM Global News
    Demo
    • Home
    • Top Stories
      • Politics
    • Business
      • Small Business
      • Marketing
    • Finance
      • Investment
    • Technology

      New Town Spares – Company Profile

      June 15, 2026
      Read More

      As Anthropic suspends access to new models, India debates its AI future

      June 14, 2026
      Read More

      Founderr.io – Company Profile – AllBusiness.com

      June 14, 2026
      Read More

      Chinese cybercrime operation that used AI to scam ‘hundreds of thousands of victims’ sued by Google

      June 13, 2026
      Read More

      What AI Agents Actually Do for Customer Service—And How to Pick One

      June 12, 2026
      Read More
    • Lifestyle
      • Travel
    • Feel Good
    • Get In Touch
    SBM Global News
    Demo
    Home»Business»DeepSeek Shows Meta’s A.I. Strategy Is Working
    Business

    DeepSeek Shows Meta’s A.I. Strategy Is Working

    By Staff WriterJanuary 30, 20256 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email
    #image_title
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    When a small Chinese company called DeepSeek revealed that it had created an A.I. system that could match leading A.I. products made in the United States, the news was greeted in many circles as a warning that China was closing the gap in the global race to build artificial intelligence.

    DeepSeek also said it built its new A.I. technology more cost effectively and with fewer hard-to-get computers chips than its American competitors, shocking an industry that had come to believe that bigger and better A.I. would cost billions and billions of dollars.

    But A.I. experts inside the tech giant Meta saw DeepSeek’s breakthrough as something more than the arrival of a nimble, new competitor from the other side of the world: It was vindication that an unconventional decision Meta made nearly two years ago was the right call.

    In 2023, Meta, in a widely criticized move, gave away its cutting-edge A.I. technology after spending millions to build it. DeepSeek used parts of that technology as well as other A.I. tools freely available on the internet through a software development method called open source.

    Meta executives believe DeepSeek’s breakthrough shows that upstarts now have a chance to innovate and compete with the tech giants that have mostly had the A.I. playing field to themselves because A.I. costs so much to build. It was something Meta executives hoped would happen when they gave away their own technology.

    “Our open source strategy was validated,” said Ragavan Srinivasan, a Meta vice president, in an interview on Tuesday. “The more people who have access to the technology needed to move things forward faster, the better.”

    Meta is also taking a close look at the work done at DeepSeek. Following Meta’s lead, the Chinese company released its technology to the open source tech community as well. Meta has created several “war rooms” where employees are reverse engineering DeepSeek’s technology, according to two people familiar with the effort who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

    The Meta employees are looking for ways to lower the cost of training its software — a term used to describe the way A.I. technologies learn from data — and apply it to Meta’s own A.I. The Information earlier reported on the war rooms.

    Before Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, gave away its A.I. tech, the company had been focused on projects like virtual reality. It was caught flat-footed when OpenAI introduced the chatbot ChatGPT in late 2022. Other tech giants like Microsoft, OpenAI’s close partner, and Google were also well ahead in their A.I. efforts.

    (The New York Times has sued OpenAI and its partner, Microsoft, claiming copyright infringement of news content related to A.I. systems. The two tech companies have denied the suit’s claims.)

    By freely sharing the code that drove its A.I. technology, called Llama, Meta hoped to accelerate the development of its technology and attract others to build on top of it. Meta engineers believed that A.I. experts working collaboratively could make more progress than teams of experts siloed inside companies, as they were at OpenAI and the other tech giants.

    Meta could afford to do this. It made money by selling online ads, not A.I. software. By accelerating the development of the A.I. it offered to consumers for free, it could bring more attention to online services like Facebook and Instagram — and sell more ads.

    “They were the only major U.S. company to take this approach. And it was easier for them to do this — more defensible,” said Chris V. Nicholson, an investor with the venture capital firm Page One Ventures, who focuses on A.I. technologies. Meta can offer A.I. below the cost to build it — or even give it away — to attract customers and increase sales of other services, he added.

    Many in Silicon Valley said Meta’s move set a dangerous precedent because the chatbots could help spread disinformation, hate speech and other toxic content. But Meta said that any risks were far outweighed by the benefits of open source. And most A.I. development, they added, had been shared around through open source until ChatGPT made companies leery of showing what they were working on.

    Demo

    Now, if DeepSeek’s work can be replicated — particularly its claim that it was able to build its A.I. more affordably than most had thought possible — that could provide more opportunities for more companies to expand on what Meta did.

    “These dynamics are invisible to the U.S. consumer,” said Mr. Nicholson. “But they are hugely important.”

    Yann LeCun, an early A.I. pioneer who is Meta’s chief A.I. scientist, said in a post on LinkedIn that people who think the takeaway from DeepSeek’s work should be that China is beating the United States at A.I. development are misreading the situation. “The correct reading is: ‘Open source models are surpassing proprietary ones,’” he said.

    Dr. LeCun added that “because their work is published and open source, everyone can profit from it. That is the power of open research.”

    By last summer, many Chinese companies had followed Meta’s lead, regularly open sourcing their own work. Those companies included DeepSeek, which was created by a quantitative trading firm called High-Flyer.

    Some Chinese companies offered “fine-tuned” versions of technology open sourced by companies from other countries, like Meta. But others, such as the start-up 01.AI, founded by a well-known investor and technologist named Kai-Fu Lee, used parts of Meta’s code to build more powerful technologies.

    U.S. tech experts still argue that U.S. companies like Meta should not be open sourcing their technologies because they were fueling A.I. in China. But others say that if American companies stopped freely providing their technology, the epicenter of open source development would simply shift to China anyway.

    Earlier this year, students at the University of California, Berkeley built an A.I. system that in many ways rivaled the performance of OpenAI’s latest system. They did this by building on top of two open-source technologies released by the Chinese tech giant Alibaba.

    “When you are in a race to build technology, the best way to compete is to share code, strengthen the foundation and accelerate the rate of progress,” said Clément Delangue, chief executive of Hugging Face, a company that hosts many of the world’s open-source A.I. projects.

    View original article here

    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Reddit
    Previous Article10 Best Black Leggings, From Fitness Editors Who’ve Tried Hundreds | 2025 Picks
    Next Article Trump Administration Modifies Freeze On Foreign Assistance

    Related Posts

    SpaceX IPO Set To Be Biggest Ever And Could Make Elon Musk A Trillionaire

    June 5, 2026
    Read More

    Scott Pelley Accuses CBS News Boss of ‘Murdering’ ‘60 Minutes’

    June 2, 2026
    Read More

    What Is Airbnb For, Exactly?

    June 1, 2026
    Read More
    Add A Comment

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    Former FBI, CIA Head Has ‘Serious Concerns’ With Trump Cabinet Picks

    December 28, 2024435

    Emirates to operate next-gen A350 on the third daily service to Cape Town

    January 14, 2026256

    AAVE Price Prediction: Target $215-225 by Mid-January 2025 as Technical Indicators Signal Bullish Momentum

    December 15, 2025240

    Ventive Hospitality Joins Green Fins: Strong ESG Lift

    February 17, 2026211
    Don't Miss
    Investment

    Why I invested in Elon Musk’s SpaceX — The Barefoot Investor

    By Staff WriterJune 15, 20263 Mins Read

    I just invested in the most overvalued piece of junk going around:Elon’s latest trillion-dollar trouser-tickler,…

    Read More

    Peggy Flanagan, Angie Craig ‘Get Ugly’ In Minnesota Senate Fight

    June 15, 2026

    How to Get Stains Out of Tupperware

    June 15, 2026

    What Sock Marks On Your Legs Could Reveal About Your Health

    June 15, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    Demo
    About Us

    Small Business Minder brings together business and related news from around the world in one place. Follow us for all the business news you'll need.

    Facebook X (Twitter)
    Our Picks

    Why I invested in Elon Musk’s SpaceX — The Barefoot Investor

    June 15, 2026

    Peggy Flanagan, Angie Craig ‘Get Ugly’ In Minnesota Senate Fight

    June 15, 2026
    Most Popular

    Former FBI, CIA Head Has ‘Serious Concerns’ With Trump Cabinet Picks

    December 28, 2024435

    Emirates to operate next-gen A350 on the third daily service to Cape Town

    January 14, 2026256
    © 2026 Small Business Minder
    • Home
    • Get In Touch

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Ad Blocker Enabled!
    Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors. To get the most from our site, please disable your Ad Blocker.