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US Concerned Over American Companies Using Chinese AI Models
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Engadget6h agoBusiness2 min read

US Concerned Over American Companies Using Chinese AI Models

Quick Look

  • The US is expressing "serious concerns" about American companies using Chinese-made AI models, citing risks of Beijing's narratives and censorship.
  • Companies are drawn to lower costs and comparable quality, with Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong highlighting use of GLM 5.2 and Kimi 2.7.

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Why It Matters

The US is concerned about American companies utilizing Chinese-made AI models, citing potential risks related to Beijing's narratives and censorship. Companies are attracted by lower costs and comparable quality.

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The US is gearing up to at least try and stifle American companies' use of Chinese-made AI models in their operations. CNBC quotes an unnamed State Department spokesperson who said the use of Chinese models "by US companies raises serious concerns." The unnamed individual added Chinese AI is "designed to advance Beijing's narratives, censor dissent and reflect CCP ideology and values.

The report claims US companies are opting for Chinese AI models due to their lower cost and comparable quality. It cited Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong, who posted about the company's use of two Chinese-made AIs: GLM 5.2 (made by Z.Ai) and Kimi 2.7 (made by Moonshot). An additional CNBC report from June quoted the CEO of startup Lindy, which switched to DeepSeek to help curb surging costs.

Another driver could be the instability of the status quo with the US government and its domestic AI champions. A few days ago, Nikkei Asia reported on a surge of American companies, including AirBnB and Uber, racing to adopt Chinese AI models. It said the surge correlates with Anthropic's suspension of the use of two models, Mythos 5 and Claude Fable 5, at the behest of the government.

It's not clear if the US could directly impose a sweeping ban on the market's choice of AI models beyond altering its own procurement rules. And it's likely the US would not be eager on restricting the use of open source models given the potential first amendment issues that would create. Not to mention it would be difficult to demand companies change their operations in overseas territories: Apple, for instance, uses Albiaba's generative AI platform for iPhones sold in China.

Open Questions

  • Can the US directly ban AI model choices?
  • Will open-source models be exempt?
  • How will overseas operations be affected?

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This article was originally published by Engadget.

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