Berliner Boersenzeitung - DeepSeek's 'Sputnik moment' exposes holes in US chip curbs

EUR -
AED 3.984673
AFN 77.105042
ALL 99.425558
AMD 426.102934
ANG 1.958088
AOA 989.473604
ARS 1156.968398
AUD 1.723346
AWG 1.952909
AZN 1.846848
BAM 1.954331
BBD 2.193677
BDT 131.80971
BGN 1.955946
BHD 0.408913
BIF 3219.083126
BMD 1.084949
BND 1.451429
BOB 7.496434
BRL 6.292381
BSD 1.086526
BTN 94.416902
BWP 14.88331
BYN 3.555618
BYR 21265.01015
BZD 2.182369
CAD 1.56549
CDF 3120.314929
CHF 0.958683
CLF 0.026525
CLP 1017.879554
CNY 7.852702
CNH 7.855479
COP 4475.416677
CRC 542.692406
CUC 1.084949
CUP 28.751162
CVE 110.183196
CZK 25.040094
DJF 193.477923
DKK 7.461556
DOP 68.079226
DZD 144.824605
EGP 54.952804
ERN 16.274242
ETB 142.73821
FJD 2.492453
FKP 0.838155
GBP 0.837934
GEL 3.010675
GGP 0.838155
GHS 16.815516
GIP 0.838155
GMD 78.11652
GNF 9395.273888
GTQ 8.363636
GYD 226.961496
HKD 8.432434
HNL 27.785091
HRK 7.535299
HTG 142.480397
HUF 399.858677
IDR 17764.800329
ILS 3.97504
IMP 0.838155
INR 94.344767
IQD 1423.301303
IRR 45676.37361
ISK 146.110243
JEP 0.838155
JMD 171.397883
JOD 0.769448
JPY 161.080251
KES 140.338775
KGS 94.879179
KHR 4354.068045
KMF 490.234104
KPW 976.571155
KRW 1576.176685
KWD 0.334349
KYD 0.905401
KZT 541.478978
LAK 23525.203011
LBP 97348.62783
LKR 320.8983
LRD 216.968915
LSL 19.984163
LTL 3.203574
LVL 0.656275
LYD 5.230975
MAD 10.523187
MDL 19.328956
MGA 5083.863435
MKD 61.562491
MMK 2277.073286
MNT 3768.138635
MOP 8.69763
MRU 43.166212
MUR 49.093633
MVR 16.71929
MWK 1883.931677
MXN 21.810159
MYR 4.822567
MZN 69.326771
NAD 19.984163
NGN 1686.944438
NIO 39.977433
NOK 11.595957
NPR 151.288393
NZD 1.898868
OMR 0.417723
PAB 1.084885
PEN 3.978578
PGK 4.387172
PHP 62.023337
PKR 304.213184
PLN 4.185377
PYG 8609.582451
QAR 3.953928
RON 4.977773
RSD 117.117724
RUB 93.577738
RWF 1546.575306
SAR 4.069117
SBD 9.125672
SCR 15.582592
SDG 652.054558
SEK 11.071182
SGD 1.449064
SHP 0.8526
SLE 24.769332
SLL 22750.849661
SOS 620.871826
SRD 39.346237
STD 22456.264093
SVC 9.506356
SYP 14106.497692
SZL 19.977181
THB 36.497988
TJS 11.824821
TMT 3.808173
TND 3.349882
TOP 2.54106
TRY 39.799091
TTD 7.37971
TWD 35.768936
TZS 2869.691649
UAH 45.113283
UGX 3973.994632
USD 1.084949
UYU 46.024981
UZS 14056.876739
VES 70.207243
VND 27687.911175
VUV 133.708298
WST 3.002465
XAF 656.455868
XAG 0.032081
XAU 0.000364
XCD 2.93213
XDR 0.81642
XOF 656.455868
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.711166
ZAR 19.856094
ZMK 9765.847367
ZMW 31.067753
ZWL 349.353296
  • CMSC

    0.1100

    23.17

    +0.47%

  • RBGPF

    66.2000

    66.2

    +100%

  • NGG

    0.0600

    62.32

    +0.1%

  • AZN

    0.9400

    76.51

    +1.23%

  • RYCEF

    0.2700

    10.05

    +2.69%

  • VOD

    0.3400

    9.5

    +3.58%

  • BP

    0.1700

    32.37

    +0.53%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    39.23

    +0.89%

  • RIO

    0.4200

    61.2

    +0.69%

  • BTI

    0.0200

    41.38

    +0.05%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.93

    0%

  • BCC

    -1.8300

    96.38

    -1.9%

  • SCS

    -0.2900

    10.79

    -2.69%

  • RELX

    0.0800

    47.81

    +0.17%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.2

    -0.04%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    24.36

    +0.04%

DeepSeek's 'Sputnik moment' exposes holes in US chip curbs
DeepSeek's 'Sputnik moment' exposes holes in US chip curbs / Photo: PETER CATTERALL - AFP

DeepSeek's 'Sputnik moment' exposes holes in US chip curbs

US export controls on high-tech chips may have inadvertently fuelled the success of start-up DeepSeek's AI chatbot, sparking fears in Washington there could be little it can do to stop China in the push for global dominance in AI.

Text size:

The firm, based in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou, has stunned investors and industry insiders with its R1 programme, which can match its American competitors seemingly at a fraction of the cost.

That's despite a strict US regime prohibiting Chinese firms from accessing the kinds of advanced chips needed to power the massive learning models used to develop AI.

DeepSeek founder Liang Wenfeng has admitted the "embargo on high-end chips" has proved a major hurdle in its work.

But while the curbs have long aimed to ensure US tech dominance, analysts suggest they may have spurred the firm to develop clever ways to overcome them.

The company has said it used the less-advanced H800 chips -- permitted for export to China until late 2023 -- to power its large learning model.

"The constraints on China's access to chips forced the DeepSeek team to train more efficient models that could still be competitive without huge compute training costs," George Washington University's Jeffrey Ding told AFP.

The success of DeepSeek, he said, showed "US export controls are ineffective at preventing other countries from developing frontier models".

"History tells us it is impossible to bottle up a general-purpose technology like artificial intelligence."

DeepSeek is far from the first Chinese firm forced to innovate in this way: tech giant Huawei has roared back into profit in recent years after reorienting its business to address US sanctions.

But it is the first to spark such panic in Silicon Valley and Washington.

Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen described it as a "Sputnik moment" -- a reference to the Soviet satellite launch that exposed the yawning technology gap between the United States and its primary geopolitical adversary.

- Fraction of the cost -

For years many had assumed US supremacy in AI was a given, with the field dominated by big Silicon Valley names like OpenAI and Facebook-parent Meta.

While China has invested millions and vowed to be the world leader in AI technology by 2030, its offerings were hardly enough to raise hackles across the Pacific.

Tech giant Baidu's attempt at matching ChatGPT, Ernie Bot, failed to impress on release -- seemingly confirming views among many that Beijing's stifling regulatory environment for big tech would prevent any real innovation.

That was combined with a tough regime, spearheaded by the administration of Joe Biden, aimed at limiting Chinese purchases of the high-tech chips needed to power AI large language models.

But DeepSeek has blown many of those ideas out of the water.

"It's overturned the long-held assumptions that many had about the computation power, the data processing that's required to innovate," Samm Sacks, a Research Scholar in Law and Senior Fellow at Yale Law School's Paul Tsai China Center, told AFP.

"And so the question is can we get cutting-edge AI at a fraction of the cost and a fraction of the computation?"

While DeepSeek's model emphasised cost-cutting and efficiency, American policy towards AI has long been based on assumptions about scale.

"Throw more and more computing power and performance at the problem to achieve better and better performance," according to George Washington University's Ding.

That's the central idea behind President Donald Trump's Stargate venture, a $500 billion initiative to build infrastructure for artificial intelligence led by Japanese giant SoftBank and ChatGPT-maker OpenAI.

But the success of DeepSeek's R1 chatbot -- which its developers claim was built for just $5.6 million -- suggest innovation can come much cheaper.

Some urge caution, stressing the firm's cost-saving measures might not be quite so innovative.

"DeepSeek V3's training costs, while competitive, fall within historical efficiency trends," Lennart Heim, an associate information scientist at the RAND Corporation, told AFP, referring to R1's previous iteration.

"AI models have consistently become cheaper to train over time -- this isn't new," he explained.

"We also don't see the full cost picture of infrastructure, research, and development."

- 'Wake-up call' -

Nevertheless, Trump has described DeepSeek as a "wake-up call" for Silicon Valley that they needed to be "laser-focused on competing to win".

Former US Representative Mark Kennedy told AFP that DeepSeek's success "does not undermine the effectiveness of export controls moving forward".

Washington could choose to fire the next salvo by "expanding restrictions on AI chips" and increased oversight of precisely what technology Chinese firms can access, he added.

But it could also look to bolster its own industry, said Kennedy, who is now Director of the Wilson Center's Wahba Institute for Strategic Competition.

"Given the limitations of purely defensive measures, it may also ramp up domestic AI investment, strengthen alliances, and refine policies to ensure it maintains leadership without unintentionally driving more nations toward China's AI ecosystem," he said.

Rebecca Arcesati, an analyst at Mercator Institute for China Studies (MERICS), told AFP "the very real fear of falling behind China could now catalyse that push".

(A.Lehmann--BBZ)