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South China Morning Post
11-02-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
Demystifying DeepSeek: 4 burning questions about the AI start-up answered
Published: 6:06pm, 10 Feb 2025 Updated: 4:37pm, 11 Feb 2025 Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) start-up DeepSeek has continued to send ripples through the industry globally, while many questions remain surrounding the firm's high-performance models developed at a fraction of the cost of their peers in the US. In a China Future Tech webinar on Monday hosted by SCMP Plus, South China Morning Post technology editor Zhou Xin , China news editor Josephine Ma and technology production editor Matt Haldane joined moderator Jacques van Wersch to discuss common myths about the low-profile Hangzhou-based company and the implications of its achievements. There is no public record suggesting that DeepSeek has received backing from the Chinese government. The private company was started as a side project of High-Flyer, a quantitative hedge fund that built up powerful computing resources over years for the purpose of algorithmic trading. These resources were then put to use in expanding the fund's focus to AI by building DeepSeek in 2023. During a visit to its office in a commercial building in Hangzhou last month, the Post saw none of the hallmarks typical of a government-funded company, such as being based in a hi-tech park. But as DeepSeek has become a national hero amid intensified efforts from the US to curb China's AI progress, it would be easy for the company to secure state support going forward.


South China Morning Post
10-02-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
Demystifying DeepSeek: Four burning questions about the AI start-up answered
Published: 6:06pm, 10 Feb 2025 Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) start-up DeepSeek has continued to send ripples through the industry globally, while many questions remain surrounding the firm's high-performance models developed at a fraction of the cost of their peers in the US. In a China Future Tech webinar on Monday hosted by SCMP Plus, South China Morning Post technology editor Zhou Xin , China news editor Josephine Ma and technology production editor Matt Haldane joined moderator Jacques van Wersch to discuss common myths about the low-profile Hangzhou-based company and the implications of its achievements. There is no public record suggesting that DeepSeek has received backing from the Chinese government. The private company was started as a side project of High-Flyer, a quantitative hedge fund that built up powerful computing resources over years for the purpose of algorithmic trading. These resources were then put to use in expanding the fund's focus to AI by building DeepSeek in 2023. During a visit to its office in a commercial building in Hangzhou last month, the Post saw none of the hallmarks typical of a government-funded company, such as being based in a hi-tech park. But as DeepSeek has become a national hero amid intensified efforts from the US to curb China's AI progress, it would be easy for the company to secure state support going forward.