FIU’s top AI expert sheds light on DeepSeek’s emergence and potential global impact

This post was originally published on this site.

By David Drucker ā€“ FIU News

A small Chinese firm named DeepSeek is causing a sensation in the West in 2025 as it releases several highly acclaimed artificial intelligence models that rival ā€” or even outperform ā€” its U.S. counterparts. DeepSeekā€™s app holds the No. 1 position in Appleā€™s App Store, and its ascent is sending stocks on a roller coaster ride.

What makes DeepSeek different? Some are applauding how easy the AI is to work with. Others are heralding capabilities and performance. A few commentators are even calling DeepSeekā€™s debut a ā€˜Sputnik moment for AI.ā€™

Here to help the public understand DeepSeekā€™s emergence and what it means for our world is Mark Finlayson [pictured above], a professor at Florida International University and one of the countryā€™s top researchers of artificial intelligence.

He discusses safety concerns around DeepSeek, how it is different from ChatGPT, what new capabilities (if any) the company has introduced, and where the Westā€™s AI researchers may go from here.

Letā€™s talk safety first. DeepSeek is a Chinese startup that until recently most of us in the U.S. knew nothing about. Can we trust DeepSeek to safeguard our personal data and information?

I am raising caution. Whatever personal information you type in, they are capturing it. You can be sure of that. This is standard practice for these models. They capture user input to train future model versions on. OpenAIā€™s ChatGPTĀ does this, as do all the other cloud-based models. OpenAI gives you the opportunity to go into a private mode in which they claim they donā€™t record what you do. Does DeepSeek provide the same guarantees? I havenā€™t used the site, but the rule of law is quite weak in China. Your protections are minimal.

DeepSeek may have no malicious intent itself, but the lack of data protection in China raises concerns. If you put sensitive information into their models, there is a good chance that the Chinese Communist Party can obtain it.

Is DeepSeekā€™s large language model much different from ChatGPT?

I am a little bit mystified as to why there is such panic [among U.S. AI companies] around DeepSeek. You do have some outperformance at the margins, but their models appear to be very similar to ones that are already out there. It uses many already-known techniques published in the literature over the last two years. The arrival of a model like this should not be such a surprise.

One interesting thing that DeepSeek has done is that they seem to have ingested the same amount of data as OpenAI, the makers of ChatGPT. This is interesting because OpenAI has a team of about 150 people, while DeepSeek claims to be significantly smaller. Another noteworthy part of this is that DeepSeekā€™s R1 model shows its work when it is answering complex problems. This reasoning, called ā€œChain of Thoughtā€ in our industry, is not public in OpenAIā€™s model.

One fact that we are hearing a lot is that DeepSeekā€™s R1 model was developed using only $6 million, which sounds like a staggeringly low budget next to what U.S. companies spend. Can we really develop a model like this at that cost?

That cost is probably just the cost of electricity. DeepSeek even says this much in the paper they released along with their model. This doesnā€™t include the purchase price of hardware, salaries, prior research or facilities. And thatā€™s fine as numbers in our industry are often not reported that way, but people need to be aware that if we just say, ā€œThis model cost only $6 million to make,ā€ this could be misleading to the public.

What do you think DeepSeekā€™s emergence could mean for AI research in the U.S.?

We AI researchers should be careful when using this tool. We often experiment with the top large language models like ChatGPT to innovate and develop new techniques, and I suspect that there will be research conducted with these new models, too. But remember, this company could be capturing any data we input into it. We need to be aware that if we experiment with DeepSeek, the company could be capturing our inputs and give Chinese competitors a window into the latest research trends we are exploring.Ā 

There are a lot of people asking, ā€œWhat should the AI community in the West do in response to this?ā€ I think that we should just do the same thing we have been doing, continuing to innovate. When you do something great for a long time, the competition is not just going to wilt away. You have to compete by working hard.

This article was originally published by FIU News and reposted here with permission.

READ MORE IN REFRESH MIAMI:

Latest posts by Guest Writer (see all)