Tech

OpenAI says DeepSeek used its models illegally, and it has evidence to prove it, new report claims

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  • New report claims OpenAI has detected evidence of distillation by DeepSeek
  • Move represents a potential breach of intellectual property
  • Whitehouse AI czar weighs-in on the subject

According to a new article by the Financial Times, OpenAI claims to have evidence that DeepSeek, the Chinese startup that has thrown the US tech market into financial turmoil, used the company’s proprietary models to train its own open-source LLM, called R1. This would represent a potential breach of intellectual property, as it goes against the OpenAI terms of service agreement.

In the article the FT writes that a source at OpenAI claims it has evidence of “distillation” occurring, which is a technique used by developers to leapfrog on the work done by larger models to achieve similar results at a much lower cost.

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