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Moonshot AI goes open-source to regain market position
Moonshot AI goes open-source to regain market position

Deccan Herald

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Deccan Herald

Moonshot AI goes open-source to regain market position

Chinese artificial intelligence startup Moonshot AI released a new open-source AI model on Friday, joining a wave of similar releases from local rivals, as it seeks to reclaim its position in the competitive domestic market. The model, called Kimi K2, features enhanced coding capabilities and excels at general agent tasks and tool integration, allowing it to break down complex tasks more effectively, the company said in a statement. Moonshot claimed the model outperforms mainstream open-source models in some areas, including DeepSeek's V3, and rival capabilities of leading U.S. models such as those from Anthropic in certain functions such as coding. The release follows a trend among Chinese companies toward open-sourcing AI models, contrasting with many U.S. tech giants like OpenAI and Google that keep their most advanced AI models proprietary. Some American firms, including Meta Platforms , have also released open-source models. Open-sourcing allows developers to showcase their technological capabilities and expand developer communities as well as their global influence, a strategy likely to help China counter U.S. efforts to limit Beijing's tech progress.

Chinese unicorn Moonshot launches AI model Kimi K2 in red-hot open-source market
Chinese unicorn Moonshot launches AI model Kimi K2 in red-hot open-source market

South China Morning Post

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • South China Morning Post

Chinese unicorn Moonshot launches AI model Kimi K2 in red-hot open-source market

Chinese start-up Moonshot AI has released a new open-source artificial intelligence (AI) model, called Kimi K2, that is touted to excel in frontier knowledge, maths, coding and general agentic tasks, as the company looks to maintain an edge against rivals such as DeepSeek Advertisement Beijing -based Moonshot said Kimi K2 was developed with a mixture-of-experts (MoE) architecture and boasts 1 trillion total parameters, with 32 billion so-called activated parameters – specialised computational units engaged for specific tasks, according to the firm's blog post on Friday. MoE is a machine-learning approach that divides an AI model into separate sub-networks, or experts – each focused on a subset of the input data – to jointly perform a task. This is said to greatly reduce computation costs during pre-training and achieve faster performance during inference time. Moonshot said it open-sourced two versions of Kimi K2. The foundation model, Kimi-K2-Base, was optimised for researchers and builders who want full control for fine-tuning and custom solutions. By contrast, Kimi-K2-Instruct was post-trained for drop-in, general-purpose chat and agentic AI experiences. Kimi K2 is now freely available via its web and mobile applications. Advertisement Moonshot's latest AI model reflects a broader trend in the industry towards open-source development, which has enabled developers – from start-ups like DeepSeek to larger tech firms such as Baidu and Alibaba Cloud – to improve efficiency and attain broader adoption of their AI products. The open-source approach gives public access to a program's source code, allowing third-party software developers to modify or share its design, fix broken links or scale up its capabilities.

OpenAI delays open AI model again, Sam Altman says he doesn't know how long it will take
OpenAI delays open AI model again, Sam Altman says he doesn't know how long it will take

India Today

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • India Today

OpenAI delays open AI model again, Sam Altman says he doesn't know how long it will take

OpenAI has slammed the brakes on the release of its eagerly-awaited open-source AI model, citing the need for more rigorous safety checks before allowing developers to get their hands on it. The launch, originally due earlier this summer and then delayed to next week, has now been postponed indefinitely. Sam Altman, CEO of the ChatGPT-maker, broke the news on Friday in a post on X (formerly Twitter), saying the company needed more time to evaluate the model's potential need time to run additional safety tests and review high-risk areas. We are not yet sure how long it will take us,' Altman wrote. 'While we trust the community will build great things with this model, once weights are out, they can't be pulled back. This is new for us and we want to get it right.' This isn't just any AI release. OpenAI's upcoming open model has been billed as one of the most exciting tech launches of the summer, right up there with the looming (and still mysterious) debut of GPT 5. But unlike GPT 5, which is expected to remain tightly controlled, the open model was designed to be downloadable and fully usable by developers without guardrails, a first for OpenAI in years. However, that freedom comes with a catch. By giving developers unrestricted access to the model's underlying 'weights', the core parameters that define its intelligence, OpenAI risks losing control over how it's used. That concern appears to be front and centre in the decision to hit Clark, OpenAI's VP of Research and head of the open model project, explained the reasoning further in his own post: 'Capability wise, we think the model is phenomenal — but our bar for an open source model is high, and we think we need some more time to make sure we're releasing a model we're proud of along every axis.'While developers around the world will now have to wait a little longer to test-drive OpenAI's most powerful open model to date, the company is promising it will be worth the wait. Insiders say the model is expected to rival the reasoning skills of the o-series — the family of models powering GPT 4o — and that it was designed to outperform all currently available open-source OpenAI's delay could also open the door for competitors. Just hours before the announcement, Chinese startup Moonshot AI unveiled its latest heavyweight: Kimi K2, a massive one-trillion-parameter model. Early benchmarks suggest Kimi K2 already outpaces OpenAI's GPT 4.1 on a range of coding and agentic tasks, raising the stakes for OpenAI's own open open-source AI arms race is heating up, with Google DeepMind, Anthropic, and Elon Musk's xAI pouring resources into their own next-gen models. For OpenAI, this delay means temporarily ceding the spotlight to its rivals, a rare move for the company that sparked the AI boom with Altman hinted at something 'unexpected and quite amazing' when he first revealed the model's initial delay in June, leaving many to wonder if OpenAI is sitting on a groundbreaking capability it simply isn't ready to unleash.- Ends

Sam Altman Confirms Indefinite Delay of OpenAI's Open-Source Model Over Safety
Sam Altman Confirms Indefinite Delay of OpenAI's Open-Source Model Over Safety

Hans India

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Hans India

Sam Altman Confirms Indefinite Delay of OpenAI's Open-Source Model Over Safety

OpenAI has once again postponed the release of its eagerly awaited open-source AI model, citing the need for more in-depth safety reviews and risk evaluations. The launch, initially expected earlier this summer and later scheduled for next week, has now been delayed indefinitely, according to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. The announcement came via a post on X (formerly Twitter), where Altman explained that the company is proceeding cautiously due to the unprecedented nature of this release. 'We need time to run additional safety tests and review high-risk areas. We are not yet sure how long it will take us,' Altman wrote. 'While we trust the community will build great things with this model, once weights are out, they can't be pulled back. This is new for us and we want to get it right.' Unlike OpenAI's more tightly guarded models like GPT-4 and the anticipated GPT-5, the upcoming open model was set to be fully downloadable and accessible without limitations. This level of openness would mark a significant shift for the company, which has historically kept its most powerful AI tools under strict control. The model's release was highly anticipated by developers and researchers worldwide, promising unrestricted access to the 'weights' — the underlying parameters that govern how the AI functions. However, this transparency also introduces serious concerns about misuse, especially when the model's intelligence rivals current state-of-the-art systems. Aidan Clark, OpenAI's VP of Research and the lead on the open model project, offered further insights into the company's rationale. 'Capability wise, we think the model is phenomenal — but our bar for an open source model is high, and we think we need some more time to make sure we're releasing a model we're proud of along every axis,' Clark posted. Despite the delay, internal sources suggest the model is designed to match — and possibly surpass — the reasoning capabilities of OpenAI's o-series models, which include the powerful GPT-4o. Its potential to outperform current open-source alternatives has made it one of the most anticipated tech releases of 2025. However, the indefinite delay gives competitors an opportunity to catch up — or even leap ahead. Notably, Chinese AI firm Moonshot AI unveiled its own mega-model, Kimi K2, just hours before OpenAI's announcement. The trillion-parameter model reportedly outperforms GPT-4.1 on complex tasks, adding pressure to OpenAI's cautious approach. The open-source AI landscape is becoming increasingly competitive, with tech giants like Google DeepMind, Anthropic, and Elon Musk's xAI investing heavily in their own cutting-edge models. OpenAI's decision to pause — even temporarily — could shift momentum in a rapidly evolving arms race. Still, hints from Altman suggest there may be more at play. Back in June, when the first delay was announced, he teased something 'unexpected and quite amazing' tied to the model, fueling speculation that OpenAI may be holding back a major breakthrough. Until then, developers will have to wait — but the promise remains that when the model is finally released, it will be worth it.

China's Moonshot AI releases open-source model to reclaim market position
China's Moonshot AI releases open-source model to reclaim market position

Time of India

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Time of India

China's Moonshot AI releases open-source model to reclaim market position

Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills Chinese artificial intelligence startup Moonshot AI released a new open-source AI model on Friday, joining a wave of similar releases from local rivals, as it seeks to reclaim its position in the competitive domestic model, called Kimi K2 , features enhanced coding capabilities and excels at general agent tasks and tool integration, allowing it to break down complex tasks more effectively, the company said in a claimed the model outperforms mainstream open-source models in some areas, including DeepSeek's V3, and rival capabilities of leading U.S. models such as those from Anthropic in certain functions such as release follows a trend among Chinese companies toward open-sourcing AI models, contrasting with many U.S. tech giants like OpenAI and Google that keep their most advanced AI models proprietary. Some American firms, including Meta Platforms, have also released open-source allows developers to showcase their technological capabilities and expand developer communities as well as their global influence, a strategy likely to help China counter U.S. efforts to limit Beijing's tech Chinese companies that have released open-source models include DeepSeek, Alibaba, Tencent and in 2023 by Tsinghua University graduate Yang Zhilin, Moonshot is among China's prominent AI startups and is backed by internet giants including company gained prominence in 2024 when users flocked to its platform for its long-text analysis capabilities and AI search its standing has declined this year following DeepSeek's release of low-cost models, including the R1 model launched in January that disrupted the global AI Kimi application ranked third in monthly active users last August but dropped to seventh place by June, according to a Chinese website that tracks AI products.

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