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wanderingmoose | 1 year ago
A company like OpenAI can put whatever licensing they want in place. But that only matters if they can enforce it. The question is, can they enforce it against deepseek? Did deepseek do something illegal under the laws of their originating country?
I've had some limited exposure to media related licensing when releasing content in China and what is allowed is very different than what is permitted in the US.
The interesting part which points to innovation moving outside of the US is US companies are beholden to strict IP laws while many places in the world don't have such restrictions and will be able to utilize more data more easily.
thiago_fm|1 year ago
You need to visit mainland China and see how AI applications are everywhere, from transport to goods shipping.
I'm not surprised at all. I hope this in the end makes the US kill its strict IP laws, which is the problem.
If the US doesn't, China will always have a huge edge on it, no matter how much NVidia hardware the US has.
And you know what, Huawei is already making inference hardware... it won't take them long to finally copy the TSMC tech and flip the situation upside down.
When China can make the equivalent of H100s, it will be hilarious because they will sell for $10 in Aliexpress :-)
twobitshifter|1 year ago
lfmunoz4|1 year ago
nostradumbasp|1 year ago
Lets be fair though. Replicating TSMC isn't something that could happen quickly. Then again, who knows how far along they already are...
gregw2|1 year ago
BTW, who in China is doing the best AI on goods shipping since you mention it?
fulafel|1 year ago
lfmunoz4|1 year ago