Flailing OpenAI Calls for Ban on Chinese AI
futurism.com
A year or two ago, OpenAI was on top of the world. Now... well, it's still probably still the world's buzziest AI startup, but its new models aren't making the splash they once were, its business model is as hazy as ever, and competition is rapidly catching up.What does a $300 billion tech company do in that situation? Double down oninnovation and development or blame a scary foreign bogeyman?Lately, it's sounding like the latter. In a recently published white paper, OpenAI called for US lawmakers to "coordinate a global ban" on what it calls "Chinese Communist Party aligned" AI models, such as its infamous competitor DeepSeek.DeepSeek made waves earlier this year when it announced an AI modelapproximately on par with OpenAI's ChatGPT, which the Chinese company made for a fraction of the price. It was a major knock against American AI companies' costly development strategy, which may explain why OpenAI is now appealing to good old American jingoism."While America maintains a lead on AI today, DeepSeek shows that our lead is not wide and is narrowing," OpenAI's paper reads. "The AI Action Plan should ensure that American-led AI prevails over CCP-led AI, securing both American leadership on AI and a brighter future for all Americans."That bright AI future feels about as far off as ever. In its current state, AI is mainly affecting Americans by polluting the internet with slop, destroying the job market, silencing free speech, and generally just ruining the whole economy.DeepSeek, for what it's worth, is privately ownedand backed by venture capitalists similar to many American tech companies. While the AI company is now closely guarded by the Chinese government as a matter of national security, there's no indication that DeepSeek is owned or controlled by the CCP.OpenAI, meanwhile, enjoys a lucrative relationship with the US government. In January, president Donald Trump announced that OpenAI would form the backbone of a $500 billion AI infrastructure project, prompting hopeful investors to flood the company with cash.Though OpenAI's policy proposal accuses China of using "AI tools to amass power and control their citizens, or to threaten or coerce other states," it has little to say about the United States' own control over global internet infrastructure, or the coordinated effort by American corporations to restrict US citizens from accessing DeepSeek.Indeed, there are plenty of glaring omissions of shady US tech dealings, like the National Security Agency's use of Facebook to surveil citizens, or the war chest Silicon Valley is all too eager to build for the Pentagon even as OpenAI accuses DeepSeek of the same.It's all a pretty telling display. OpenAI concludes its paper by asking the state to blow the cap off of personal privacy laws, so that it can continue scraping our data to build its AI. What was that about amassing power to control citizens?Here's an idea: if OpenAI's billionaire founder feels he can't compete on the free and open market, maybe it's timeto make way for someone who can. That's capitalism, after all.Share This Article
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