The fact it’s open source and can be run isolated from a network is reassuring—but not everyone can do that, and there’s no guarantee the version you’re using online is identical to the open source version. I think caution with the online version is pretty warranted.
I'm not saying everyone will run this at home, but good open source models democratize the access to AI. More companies around the world can deploy them. I think it's also good to have models from outside the US to avoid American bias in the models themselves.
Fair. All of the big ones have some level of filters. In the US it's not regulated so the censorship/filtering is determined by the company providing the service. Those companies have business relations in both countries. I'm unsure the extent or how much any Chinese company might have with American business. In any case, both have the capability to collect your data and I'm of the opinion they do despite any claims of privacy. Furthermore, there's no tech company as large as these players without government funding via contracts.
Using AI is at a bare minimum as insecure as using Google/Bing search pre-AI era. Again my opinion is that it's dangerously less so, whether Chinese or American.
To that extent i personally can't imagine why China having your data is less secure than the US unless you're in a position of political importance to the US (government office/job/contractor) or running a large business with the capability to influence the US government through lobbying/media/etc...
FWIW I personally avoid AI in every way i know how to.
Just so i'm not called a tankie, I don't trust the CCP for anything other than cheap exploitative labor.
Very informative read, thank you. Lets wait for Openb-R1 to be able for download, and use that time to check the machine's code for bugs (likely, every larger software has them!), backdoors (can never be excluded as a possibility), and ways of further optimization.
I have to admit that their idea to "milk" DeepSeek-R1 for its own reasoning data is intriguing. I wonder how early in that training process the political bias has gotten its foot into the door. Or is this a late-stage filter?
Roflmasterbigpimp accused the Chinese company of spying.
I pointed out that the Chinese company can't spy becaause it's model was open source and could be locally run, while the US company set up its operation to allow it to spy on any use of its model.
Mubelotix claimed ChatGPT made their model public, which would only be relevant to the conversation as a evidence that the US is not spying either.
Well, there is an Android client that sends keystrokes (and loads of other data) back to Chinese servers. Which very much fulfils my definitions of spying.
No you are wrong. The USA doing things is not an excuse for China doing things it's just me calling out favoritism. In your comment you decided that the USA doing bad things is acceptable and the China doing bad things is not and that is mentally feeble.
If you don't want people to respond to you don't say ironically stupid things.
Deepseek is open source. People have looked it over and modified it a ton. If you are hosting it yourself there is no indication of it being Spyware or whatever.
If you blindly use someone else's server you are willingly giving up your days to them. Facebook has sold user data to forging companies, yet people like you have a hate boner for china.
I have no love lost for either government, especially at the moment when my rights are being threatened and trampled by my own. Between the two, China has no power to effect my life directly.
Regardless, there probably was some state help behind the development of deepseek, but that isn't relevant to the discussions of the tech and how western companies have been so stuck in their ways chasing short sighted profits at best or gifting at worst.
Either way, us companies have been missusing LLMs because they want to replace workers with them. That motivation isn't going to inspire a ton of innovation.