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Alibaba launches Qwen3 'hybrid' AI model, challenges OpenAI, Google
Alibaba launches Qwen3 'hybrid' AI model, challenges OpenAI, Google

Express Tribune

time29-04-2025

  • Business
  • Express Tribune

Alibaba launches Qwen3 'hybrid' AI model, challenges OpenAI, Google

Listen to article Alibaba Group on Monday unveiled Qwen3, a new family of large language models designed to compete with leading AI systems from OpenAI and Google. The release includes eight models, ranging from 0.6 billion to 235 billion parameters, and features a combination of dense and mixture-of-experts (MoE) architectures. The Chinese tech giant claims Qwen3 matches or outperforms the capabilities of OpenAI's o3-mini and Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro in several key benchmarks, including coding, math reasoning, and complex problem-solving. Qwen3 models support 119 languages and were trained on 36 trillion tokens sourced from textbooks, code, question-answer datasets, and AI-generated material. Unlike some competitors, Alibaba has made several Qwen3 models open-weight, available for download via Hugging Face and GitHub. The flagship Qwen-3-235B-A22B model, which achieved the highest scores in tests, remains restricted for now. Qwen3 introduces a 'hybrid reasoning' approach, allowing users to toggle between faster, non-reasoning outputs and slower, deeper reasoning modes to optimize accuracy. Alibaba says this flexibility enhances efficiency and user control over AI operations. The release intensifies competition in China's AI sector, following recent launches by DeepSeek and Baidu. It also comes amid heightened US export restrictions on advanced chips to China, which could impact future model training. Qwen3 will be available through cloud providers such as Fireworks AI and Hyperbolic, offering businesses new options beyond proprietary US AI systems. Industry observers say Alibaba's move signals a rapid closing of the gap between open and closed AI models globally. "Qwen3's performance shows that open models are keeping pace," said Tuhin Srivastava, CEO of AI platform Baseten. Alibaba previously released Qwen2.5-Max in January but says Qwen3 represents a significant leap in reasoning ability, coding proficiency, and multi-language support.

Alibaba unveils Qwen 3, a family of 'hybrid' AI reasoning models
Alibaba unveils Qwen 3, a family of 'hybrid' AI reasoning models

Yahoo

time28-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Alibaba unveils Qwen 3, a family of 'hybrid' AI reasoning models

Chinese tech company Alibaba on Monday released Qwen 3, a family of AI models the company claims matches and in some cases outperforms the best models available from Google and OpenAI. Most of the models are — or soon will be — available for download under an "open" license from AI dev platform Hugging Face and GitHub. They range in size from 0.6 billion parameters to 235 billion parameters. Parameters roughly correspond to a model's problem-solving skills, and models with more parameters generally perform better than those with fewer parameters. The rise of China-originated model series like Qwen have increased the pressure on American labs such as OpenAI to deliver more capable AI technologies. They've also led policymakers to implement restrictions aimed at limiting the ability of Chinese AI companies to obtain the chips necessary to train models. According to Alibaba, Qwen 3 models are "hybrid" models in the sense that they can take time and "reason" through complex problems or answer simpler requests quickly. Reasoning enables the models to effectively fact-check themselves, similar to models like OpenAI's o3, but at the cost of higher latency. "We have seamlessly integrated thinking and non-thinking modes, offering users the flexibility to control the thinking budget," wrote the Qwen team in a blog post. The Qwen 3 models support 119 languages, Alibaba says, and were trained on a data set of nearly 36 trillion tokens. Tokens are the raw bits of data that the model processes; 1 million tokens is equivalent to about 750,000 words. Alibaba says Qwen 3 was trained on a combination of textbooks, "question-answer pairs," code snippets, and more. These improvements, along with others, greatly boosted Qwen 3's performance compared to its predecessor, Qwen 2, says Alibaba. On Codeforces, a platform for programming contests, the largest Qwen 3 model — Qwen-3-235B-A22B — beats out OpenAI's o3-mini. Qwen-3-235B-A22B also bests o3-mini on the latest version of AIME, a challenging math benchmark, and BFCL, a test for assessing a model's ability to "reason" about problems. But Qwen-3-235B-A22B isn't publicly available — at least not yet. The largest public Qwen 3 model, Qwen3-32B, is still competitive with a number of proprietary and open AI models, including Chinese AI lab DeepSeek's R1. Qwen3-32B surpasses OpenAI's o1 model on several tests, including an accuracy benchmark called LiveBench. Alibaba says Qwen 3 "excels" in tool-calling capabilities as well as following instructions and copying specific data formats. In addition to releasing models for download, Qwen 3 is available from cloud providers including Fireworks AI and Hyperbolic. Tuhin Srivastava, co-founder and CEO of AI cloud host Baseten, said that Qwen 3 is another point in the trend line of open models keeping pace with closed-source systems such as OpenAI's. "The U.S. is doubling down on restricting sales of chips to China and purchases from China, but models like Qwen 3 that are state-of-the-art and open [...] will undoubtedly be used domestically," he told TechCrunch in a statement. "It reflects the reality that businesses are both building their own tools [as well as] buying off the shelf via closed-model companies like Anthropic and OpenAI." This article originally appeared on TechCrunch at

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