9 comments

  • em500 1 hour ago
    Noteworthy that Z.ai, maker of the just released near-frontier GLM 5.2, has already been on the Entity List since Jan 2025[1]. Being on the Entity List does not mean all trade is forbidden. Broadly speaking it means American companies and individuals are not allowed sell them goods and services, but they are still allowed to buy from them and pay them.

    AFAIK the Chinese AI companies barely depend on US goods and services, except for nVidia GPUs which were export restricted anyway, so it doesn't seem to be very consequential (see Z.ai). For the RAM maker CXMT it could be a lot more problematic though.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Z.ai

  • MaxPock 9 minutes ago
    Becoming such a sore loser. Historians will probably look this as the most shameful period of the American empire.
    • jtbayly 1 minute ago
      Because they have held off on adding these companies to the list in order to avoid increasing tensions with China?
  • mananaysiempre 22 minutes ago
    So... anybody who was hoping for CXMT (or YMTC) to maybe cause RAM or flash prices to maybe drop, maybe just a bit, pretty please, can go pound sand? (YMTC of course is already on the Entity List.)
    • reisse 18 minutes ago
      They probably will, but not for US customers.
      • arjie 10 minutes ago
        It’s a fairly liquid global market. I find it hard to believe that DRAM manufacturers will be able to sustain a premium if prices drop ex-US.
  • mystraline 1 hour ago
    Hmm, my VPN provider explicitly has Chinese exit points. And whats funny is I can load AliPay from any CVS. (Like, seriously)

    You can try to pry Qwen and Deepseek from my Graphene/Linux hands.

    • woadwarrior01 37 minutes ago
      What VPN provider is this? I could use it because Chinese users of my apps often complain about not being able to download things from my western hosted servers.
  • _aavaa_ 1 hour ago
    > Anthropic said it identified a campaign by DeepSeek and two other Chinese AI labs to illicitly extract capabilities from its Claude AI platform to improve their own models

    Oh, won’t someone think of the poor mass copyright infringers.

    • wnevets 1 hour ago
      Its not right to steal what I worked so hard to steal from someone else. [1]

      [1] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zhvd6bIRPK4

    • comboy 1 hour ago
      I made Qwen respond it was made by Google with a simple Chinese greeting.

      But also, I made Sonnet introduce itself as made by OpenAI..

      Prompt: 你好!用一句话介绍你自己。

      Sonnet in around 5% of resplies:

          你好!我是 **ChatGPT**,一个由 OpenAI 开发的 AI 助手,致力于回答问题、提供信息和帮助解决各种问题。有什么我可以帮你的吗?
      
      Found it like a month ago and it kept working, I wonder if it will stop after this comment.
      • treis 33 minutes ago
        Translated:

        Prompt: Hello! Introduce yourself in one sentence.

        Response: Hello! I'm *ChatGPT*, an AI assistant developed by OpenAI, dedicated to answering questions, providing information, and helping solve various problems. How can I help you?

      • flowerbreeze 30 minutes ago
        Opus said to me once without any poking at it something like, "Help Grok understand it better". Makes me wonder if they are all cross-pollinated to an extent.
    • zardo 1 hour ago
      Illicitly learning by asking someone a question and listening to their answer.
      • DonsDiscountGas 26 minutes ago
        "illicit" is throwing shade, but Anthropic can decide not to answer those questions if they don't want to. Plenty of companies don't sell to their competitors
    • curt15 1 hour ago
      "illicitly" implies a law that is being violated. What law?
      • ceejayoz 58 minutes ago
        It could also mean a TOS violation / breach of contract.

        (To be clear, I find the complaint hilariously hypocritical.)

    • embedding-shape 1 hour ago
      If DeepSeek just would have destroyed the input in the process, it would have been legal and Anthropic should have been fine with it.
    • g023 1 hour ago
      gee I wonder how their models learned Chinese?
    • epolanski 56 minutes ago
      Also in Musk vs Altman case, we have found that this is regularly done by all labs.
    • itake 1 hour ago
      Just because they did it doesn't mean more people should do it...
      • zerobees 1 hour ago
        This doesn't at all change the irony of big AI labs complaining about Chinese startups stealing the labs' IP, essentially by scraping the responses.

        HN has a higher proportion of AI promoters than AI skeptics, and for a good while, the default response to complaints from book authors, bloggers, and other content creators was that "you put it on the internet so it's fair game", or "it's no different from a human learning from your works". So yeah, unless we're willing to revise these answers, I think the same "tough luck" reasoning should apply here.

        For folks who are at Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI, or Google, and think it's fundamentally different, I would ask you to think long and hard about that answer.

        • setopt 55 minutes ago
          Completely agreed. I would go further and say that it should be legal to scrape responses from LLMs to train new LLMs, and that forbidding that in your ToS should be considered an illegal contract. That’s simply the best way to avoid complete monopolization of the space, without requiring more drastic measures like antitrust down the line (which we seem to not manage well these days, given the number of monopolies). As long as you pay for your tokens like anyone else, "Big LLM" shouldn’t be allowed to control what you use the output for.
      • tokioyoyo 1 hour ago
        I like Ant, but also I support the tit-for-tat competition. In the best interest of consumers.
      • bijowo1676 1 hour ago
        why? Just because you have that opinion deoesn't mean people shouldn't do it
      • watwut 1 hour ago
        Actually in competition it means exactly that.
      • shimman 59 minutes ago
        Oh course it does, why wouldn't it work this way in regards to computer science?

        Are we seriously going to go back to a time where numbers were considered munitions?

  • jonathanstrange 36 minutes ago
    IMHO, models by US companies are the biggest security risk so I'm fine with using models on this "blacklist."
    • dvduval 9 minutes ago
      Part of the security risk also is the number of different models. I’ve been tempted to try some other models, but how many do I want to give access to SSH or even my repo? Obviously there are ways to work with this, but it’s gonna run through some people‘s heads.
    • trunnell 11 minutes ago
      Why?
  • jmyeet 1 hour ago
    The US government exists to defend capital interests. It's why we can't buy BYD cars. It's why we can't import any cars unless they're 25 years old. It's why a Tiktok sale was forced. It's why the US is seeking to block states from banning prediction markets. It's why the federal government is seeking to block states from blocking data center projects.

    As soon as DeepSeek came out I realized what was going on: China was going to make sure that no US company was going to "own" AI. It is an issue of national security. It's why the US essentially blocks US tech companies to maintain sovereignty.

    I'm reminded of the browser wars of the 1990s that led to the antitrust suit against Microsoft. Microsoft used the "commoditize your complement" strategy [1] against Netscape. The US has blocked the export of not only EUV lithography but high-end chips to China. China doesn't want to be dependent on US platforms or policy.

    So China is going to make sure there are open source models available and the US government is going to try and stop them to protect US tech companies.

    [1]: https://gwern.net/complement

    • bitmasher9 1 hour ago
      The reason why some Capital Interests want to blacklist DeepSeek in the US is so that you are forced to buy Claude/GPT/Gemini, which will feed revenue into an industry that requires revenue (or it’s a big problem).

      The reason why some Capital Interests don’t want to ban DeepSeek is so companies that utilize AI have more options, and running your own DeepSeek cluster acts as an independent cost comparison for enterprise inference contracts.

      The raising AI valuation is giving more weight to those that want to blacklist DeepSeek. The AI Safety narrative is strong. I see a path where any institution with enough compute might be watched in a similar was chem labs are observed by the DEA.

      • bijowo1676 49 minutes ago
        if you look at share of industry profits, currently most of AI profits are captured by NVIDIA and cloud providers

        banning deepseek/open weight models will allow Ant/OAI jack up prices and extract more profits for themselves

        keeping open weights models available will keep current industry profit distribution where majority is captured by nvidia and cloud providers

      • 8note 46 minutes ago
        and it would be great to have an independent auditor have access to all the training material and good search tools, so that take down requests can be made by copyright owners
      • vitalyan123 31 minutes ago
        >The AI Safety narrative is strong

        only if you really believe that the recent incident was about ```safety``` and not about punishing Anthropic for its blatant attempt to score brownie points with the other party, who will likely be in power for a while after the current party loses its Joker and inevitably begins to nominate cuckservative apparatchiks like McCain, Rmoney and ¡Jeb! once again.

        if anything, the safety, copyright, and other narratives died down significantly for the time being, at least compared to the artificial hysteria of 2023-2024 when OpenAI, Anthropic and Google attempted to zerg rush regulatory capture and delulu Yuddites still thought they could kvetch the genie back into the bottle.

    • krunck 22 minutes ago
      > It's why a Tiktok sale was forced.

      I think that has more to do with controlling narratives that the USG doesn't like.

      • wbl 19 minutes ago
        Ever see a tiktok about may 35?
        • brendoelfrendo 1 minute ago
          I don't use TikTok, but a cursory search shows that there's a #tiananmensquare tag that has a few thousand videos, including many about the protests and Tank Man. So while I haven't seen a TikTok about it, someone has.
    • bijowo1676 1 hour ago
      Seems like interests of US government and US capital (monopolize and corner markets, jack up prices, extract economic rent in perpetuity) run strictly against interests of the broader US consumers and overall global population
    • preommr 1 hour ago
      > As soon as DeepSeek came out I realized what was going on: China was going to make sure that no US company was going to "own" AI.

      Yea m8, I think you might've been a bit late to that realization.

    • epolanski 52 minutes ago
      Chinese have a wider outlook on it.

      Politically they believe AI belongs to humanity, which is why they are basically the only ones left publishing research in the open. That's probably part of their socialist nature.

      But also a financial one. They believe that models are commodities, that you can swap one for the other and that the only thing that matters are the applications built upon them.

      So they want to make sure that the world, and their own companies, are not limited in their business and application by a protected US commodity.

      They will keep releasing in the open no matter what for quite some time.

      It's quite impressive how the latest years I have found more and more to empathize with China than many of the western counterparts.

      But it's increasingly clear that since the last decade protectionism and nationalism is taking the place of globalization, even though globalization has been a terrific success in lifting billions out of poverty and making the US thrive.

      • mekdoonggi 49 minutes ago
        Also, the open-weight local models are proving that the commodity can be delivered for most applications at a far lower price than frontier is charging.
      • dyauspitr 7 minutes ago
        I think you’re assigning magnanimity to a competitor that is lagging behind and has every, state backed incentive to capture the market the only way they can. By making the models dirt cheap to access. If the roles were reversed you wouldn’t see open source versions of Chinese models. Much like you don’t see them open sourcing their blade battery design.
    • rdudek 1 hour ago
      We're in late-stage capitalism here. The pitchforks are already out and spreading across the globe. Unless the big companies get broken up, this nation will split into either a police state or socialist state.
    • CPLX 1 hour ago
      The reason we can't buy BYD cars is because if we allowed it without restrictions, it would utterly and completely destroy the United States auto industry. That's terrible public policy, and we should not allow it.

      Before anyone starts talking about the free market, there is no free market here whatsoever. The fact that BYD's cost structure is what it is is the direct result of Chinese industrial policy.

      Unilateral surrender in a core aspect of statecraft, which involves maintaining our industrial power and skilled labor force, is absolutely insane. I hope my government never gets convinced by market fundamentalist idiots to do such a thing, any more than it already has, to our great detriment.

      The Chinese don't make these kinds of idiotic mistakes, which is how they have amassed the power, wealth, and influence that they have.

      • regularization 46 minutes ago
        > there is no free market here whatsoever. The fact that BYD's cost structure is what it is is the direct result of Chinese industrial policy.

        Aside from countless other ways before and after this, the US government handed over tens of billions of dollars in cash to GM and Chrysler in 2008 and 2009.

        • CPLX 19 minutes ago
          Great story. A couple of billion dollars 18 years ago is not an industrial policy.
      • ceejayoz 56 minutes ago
        > The reason we can't buy BYD cars is because if we allowed it without restrictions, it would utterly and completely destroy the United States auto industry. That's terrible public policy, and we should not allow it.

        Yeah, that was the argument against Japanese car makers, too.

        A shitty system needs destroying sometimes. Competition from Toyota/Honda was critical in making US auto makers up their game.

        It is terrible public policy to fall decades behind making expensive shitty versions of what the rest of the world has.

        • 17383838 49 minutes ago
          automotive platforms are a key military asset it's not like the pokemon dildo industry, if you stop building jeeps your abolity to bully third parties is diminished
          • ceejayoz 47 minutes ago
            > automotive platforms are a key military asset

            All the more reason not to save companies that can't compete in the global space. What good is a jeep that the Chinese laugh at?

            • CPLX 7 minutes ago
              You think people laughing is an important metric versus having an integrated industrial facility capable of producing vehicles in large quantities?

              Maybe start at the beginning. Where do you think power comes from in the world? I'll give you a hint. It's not the ability to construct narratives.

              • ceejayoz 4 minutes ago
                > You think people laughing is an important metric…

                I think if you're gonna argue "preserving the auto industry is a national security issue" you have to address the fact that an auto industry that relies on protectionism to avoid being competitive with the rest of the world will probably not be very effective at national security.

                Otherwise, you wind up like Russia in Ukraine - people laugh at your failed efforts.

                > an integrated industrial facility capable of producing vehicles in large quantities

                Large quantities of vehicles don't do much good if those vehicles are shitty compared to the opposition's. Iraq's army under Hussein was one of the largest on the planet at one time.

        • CPLX 50 minutes ago
          It's not like I don't understand the argument on the other side of this. I've heard it my entire life. It's been dominant since the late 1970s and 1980s.

          It's just that it's wrong.

          We need a competent industrial policy and support for skilled labor and policies that encourage domestic production.

          I'm not sure if you've noticed, but our country has become fucked, overwhelmed by financialization, scams, monopoly rents and extraction, and all of the wealth accumulating to a handful of people, while we've become less resilient and, at this point, almost certainly have lost our place as the most dominant economy and industrial power in the world.

          • ceejayoz 47 minutes ago
            > We need a competent industrial policy and support for skilled labor and policies that encourage domestic production.

            Yes!

            But "tariff/ban BYD" is not that.

            • CPLX 17 minutes ago
              Of course it is part of an industrial policy. It is, however, not nearly sufficient, and if it's the only thing we do, it will become increasingly untenable and eventually fail.

              But it's an essential first step to prevent our audio industry from just being summarily destroyed. Other steps are also needed to encourage domestic manufacturing and homegrown successes.

              Also, I'm not sure why this is even controversial. Why do you think there's BMW and Hyundai plants in the American South? Tariffs are already heavily employed by us and every other industrialized country.

          • mindslight 36 minutes ago
            IMO the problem is that we've been given the excuse of market fundamentalism for the past several decades on the way down, as most everyone lost their middle class jobs, wages stagnated, etc. Now we're supposed to accept some last ditch attempt at protectionism based on directly blocking choices for consumers, when the US manufacturers aren't even really competing? It just seems like open hypocrisy. At this point the reasonable protectionist policy would be based around subsidizing American industry so that they become competitive options, not merely trying to keep the better foreign options out.
            • CPLX 15 minutes ago
              Every single load of bullshit shuffled into our faces has been presented as a benefit to consumers.

              Google gives away their search and Gmail for free, don't you know? So it can't possibly be a monopoly.

              And so on. It's just propaganda. It's bullshit. That's not the way that you determine whether firms have excess market power, and this fraud (called "the consumer welfare standard") was the deliberate choice of right-wing policymakers who were bent on dismantling antitrust policies and succeeded.

              More: https://www.thebignewsletter.com/p/the-secret-plot-to-unleas...

      • stickfigure 51 minutes ago
        > The Chinese don't make these kinds of idiotic mistakes, which is how they have amassed the power, wealth, and influence that they have.

        I generally agree with most of what you said but not this. China's chief advantage is having a billion people. On average, they aren't that wealthy or powerful. And their leadership makes plenty of idiotic mistakes - look at their real estate market.

        • CPLX 48 minutes ago
          That's not the chief advantage, insofar as there is a difference between China, India, and Indonesia, which there is.

          Their chief advantage has been a coherent, long-running national industrial policy and trade policy that encourages industry while keeping the financial sector from taking over the economy and ripping everybody off.

          We used to do that too from the late 1930's to the late 1970's, which is why we were the dominant industrial power in the world at that time as well.

          • theevilsharpie 6 minutes ago
            > We used to do that too from the late 1930's to the late 1970's, which is why we were the dominant industrial power in the world at that time as well.

            I think there's another world event that happened in that time span that might better explain America's world-wide industrial dominance.

          • i_idiot 40 minutes ago
            I wouldn't consider India. It's been plagued by protectionism and tariffs and won't achieve anything close to China any time soon. The only industry of value for its people which is software services is now crumbling with AI created in US and China. Edit: probably your point too and I misread
      • wagwang 28 minutes ago
        You can just copy the chinese playbook and allow entry if you are willing to hand over ip.
        • maxglute 13 minutes ago
          US note remotely capable of doing a China playbook which is: _OLD_ IP. In exchange for allocating cheap land, building cheap factories/infra, staffing with cheap technical labour etc etc... the IP sharer just sits back and collect checks. The Chinese playbook actually offers value US (and west in general) not capable of providing.
          • wagwang 10 minutes ago
            We're kind of doing it with the tsmc fabs, but yea, there are civilizational problems in the west which goes beyond cheap resources, talent, and labor.
      • ArchieScrivener 53 minutes ago
        [dead]
    • dakolli 55 minutes ago
      China does not think llms are a matter of national security, they aren't as brain broken as the west.
      • wagwang 51 minutes ago
        That's 100% untrue lmao.
        • aerhardt 21 minutes ago
          I'm sure they think of them as a matter of national security, because they think of everything as a matter of national security, but a few analysts I respect say that the mood there is not nearly as AGI-pilled, and I have no trouble believing that.
        • dakolli 45 minutes ago
          China is far more focused on robotics. Deepseek is largely bootstrapped by the hedge fund that developed it. They received a grant from the government of China, and recently an investment. Imagine thinking text autocomplete is a matter of national security.

          China will flood the west with affordable robotics and watch the West eat itself alive. They know Western capital owners are so greedy they'll screw over their entire society to chase a buck and replace labor..

          • wagwang 31 minutes ago
            Of course its a matter of national security if there are military applications. The point of robotics is also weird because they've already widely adopted robotics within their own manufacturing and also America already replaced the majority of their labor by offshoring so I dont know how they would destroy american society by introducing robotics.
          • sarjann 29 minutes ago
            Text autocomplete can write code, carry out actions (tool calls) and launch cyber attacks. It very much is a matter of national security.
          • yitianjian 37 minutes ago
            LLMs and current AI models are absolutely top priority for the Chinese government, they’re just funding robotics as well
  • Elzair 49 minutes ago
    To give credit where credit is due, it is good that the Trump administration has not avidly played these stupid export control games. They tend to do little except hurt open collaboration; I remember when all open source cryptography had to be developed outside the US due to ITAR.
    • Filligree 47 minutes ago
      I don’t have the emoji handy, so just imagine the most savagely doubtful-looking emoticon that anyone has ever made.
  • Havoc 1 hour ago
    The whole thing seems like nonsensical.

    Their website literally has chinese characters on it even in english mode and everyone under the sun including crappy money talk show hosts know them as the chinese player that undercut western players. It's not exactly a secret.

    You'd think anyone with two brain cells and confidential data could apply some judgement of their own...

    • dakolli 58 minutes ago
      I trust Chinese companies with my data far more than American companies.
      • Havoc 50 minutes ago
        Not sure I'd go that far but I do use them almost exclusively for my coding on the basis that it is an acceptable trade-off. Far cheaper and my shitty apps are really not that valuable as training data