Interesting Things to Know
DeepSeek Emerges as AI’s Dark Horse, Shaking Up the Industry
At the start of 2025, most Americans had never heard of DeepSeek, a Chinese tech startup. But within weeks, it had taken the artificial intelligence (AI) world by storm—leaving industry giants scrambling to catch up.
By late January, DeepSeek’s AI assistant, DeepSeek-R1, had overtaken ChatGPT to become the most downloaded free app in Apple’s U.S. App Store. The sudden rise of this unknown competitor sparked a wave of curiosity—and controversy.
A Game-Changer in AI?
According to Mashable, DeepSeek-R1 outperforms ChatGPT in technical areas like coding and complex mathematical equations while delivering similar results for general queries. However, OpenAI’s ChatGPT still holds an edge in natural-sounding conversation.
What sets DeepSeek apart is its open-source nature. Unlike ChatGPT, which operates on paid service tiers and proprietary code, DeepSeek-R1 allows anyone to access and modify it freely. That level of accessibility has fueled its rapid adoption.
The Real Shock: Cost & Market Disruption
Beyond its performance, DeepSeek made an even bolder claim: its AI runs on reduced-capacity chips at just one-tenth the cost of competitors. If true, that would make it one of the most cost-efficient AI models ever developed.
The impact was immediate. Chipmaker stocks plunged, with industry leader Nvidia losing $589 billion in market value in a single day—the biggest one-day stock loss in history, according to Yahoo Finance. While U.S. tech stocks have since stabilized, the uncertainty remains.
Doubts and National Security Concerns
Not everyone believes DeepSeek’s claims. Inc. reported that some tech CEOs suspect the company is misleading the public about its low-cost chips. Scale AI CEO Alexander Wang told CNBC that he believes DeepSeek secretly has access to 50,000 Nvidia H100 chips, which are banned from export to China due to national security concerns.
Another potential issue? User data storage. Wired reported that all DeepSeek user data is stored on servers in China, raising serious privacy concerns in the U.S. and beyond.
The Future of AI Competition
DeepSeek’s sudden rise has rattled the AI world. Whether it’s truly a revolutionary breakthrough or a house of cards remains to be seen. But one thing is certain—AI competition is fiercer than ever, and the landscape is changing fast.
