
Sam Altman admits Chinese AI pushed OpenAI to release its own open-weight models
This sparked fears within OpenAI. Sam Altman claimed that releasing open-weight models became a necessity to avoid Chinese dominance. He told CNBC, 'It was clear that if we didn't do it, the world was gonna head to be mostly built on Chinese open-source models.'Altman accepted that this was a serious reason behind the release. However, he clarified that it was not the only reason.What open-weight model really meansAn open-weight model like gpt-oss is not the same as an open-source model like DeepSeek R1. In an open-weight model, users are given access to 'weights.' Weights refer to the characteristics or elements that are you used to train a Large Language Model (LLM).For certain queries, the AI gives more weight to certain words or sequences. An open-weight model gives access of these weights to users. Developers can then see these weights and how they're used in the creation of AI models.However, the way the AI was trained or the information used to train the model remain restricted. Thus, the code or the information used to train gpt-oss is not available to the public.Yet, ChatGPT's open-weight models can be crucial. Developers can not only understand the weights of the models, but use them locally or add them to pre-existing programs. This will help negate the dependence on Chinese open-source models, strengthening US' position.This move comes at a time when the US government is concerned about China's rise in the AI race. The Trump administration has even put stricter restrictions on advanced chip sales to Beijing.- Ends

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