Tech

OpenAI’s Altman says ‘no plans’ to sue China’s DeepSeek

Share
Share
openai
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

OpenAI chief Sam Altman said Monday the US company has “no plans” to sue Chinese startup DeepSeek, which rattled Silicon Valley with its powerful and apparently cheaply developed chatbot.

ChatGPT creator OpenAI warned last week that Chinese companies were actively attempting to replicate its advanced AI models.

“No, we have no plans to sue DeepSeek right now. We are going to just continue to build great products and lead the world with model capability, and I think that will work out fine,” Altman told reporters in Tokyo.

“DeepSeek is certainly an impressive model, but we believe we will continue to push the frontier and deliver great products, so we’re happy to have another competitor,” he also reiterated.

“We’ve had many before, and I think it is in everyone’s interest for us to push ahead and continue to lead.”

DeepSeek’s performance has sparked a wave of accusations that it has reverse-engineered the capabilities of leading US technology, such as the AI powering ChatGPT.

OpenAI has said rivals are using a process known as distillation in which developers creating smaller models learn from larger ones by copying their behavior and decision-making patterns—similar to a student learning from a teacher.

But the company is itself facing multiple accusations of intellectual property violations, primarily related to the use of copyrighted materials in training its generative AI models.

© 2025 AFP

Citation:
OpenAI’s Altman says ‘no plans’ to sue China’s DeepSeek (2025, February 3)
retrieved 3 February 2025
from

This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no
part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Share

Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
HR departments could soon be set for a major shake-up as AI takes hold
Tech

HR departments could soon be set for a major shake-up as AI takes hold

Agentic AI adoption will rise by 327% by 2027, boosting productivity by...

ChatGPT is getting smarter, but its hallucinations are spiraling
Tech

ChatGPT is getting smarter, but its hallucinations are spiraling

OpenAI’s latest AI models, GPT o3 and o4-mini, hallucinate significantly more often...

You can now edit images in Gemini directly
Tech

You can now edit images in Gemini directly

Google’s Gemini can now edit both AI-generated and personal images using text...