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Beijing is reportedly exploring blocking overseas distribution of its leading AI models, viewing them as national security assets. This challenges the widespread assumption that companies can indefinitely rely on these models as a low-cost alternative to Western frontier models, forcing a strategic rethink.

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Despite security concerns, US companies might adopt Chinese open-source models like GLM because they can be hosted on US hardware with no data leakage. The immense cost savings and ability to maintain full control over the stack make them a practical alternative to expensive, risky frontier models.

The proliferation of powerful open-weight models from Chinese entities is not just a commercial move. It's a calculated geopolitical strategy to commoditize the AI model layer. By reducing the technological gap and preventing US companies from establishing an unassailable lead, China aims to dilute America's economic dominance in a field potentially worth trillions.

Washington's pressure on firms like Anthropic to block foreign access to advanced AI models is creating a vacuum that China's competitive, open-source models are filling. This policy, intended to protect US interests, may ironically undermine them by pushing the global developer community towards a rival ecosystem.

DeepSeek's V4 model, while not frontier-level, is drastically cheaper than US counterparts. This makes it highly attractive for most business use cases, creating a national security risk if US companies become dependent on Chinese-controlled, open-source AI infrastructure that could be altered or restricted, leaving them strategically vulnerable.

As Silicon Valley startups increasingly adopt cheaper Chinese AI platforms, a political backlash is likely. The US government may block their use, citing national security risks and data privacy concerns, mirroring past restrictions on Chinese EVs and telecom hardware.

Marc Andreessen posits that Chinese firms release strong open-source AI models as a strategic loss leader. Unable to directly sell commercial AI in the West, they offer free models to build global influence and funnel users towards their paid domestic services and related products.

China is considering restricting overseas access to its most advanced AI models from firms like Alibaba and ByteDance. This move directly emulates US restrictions on models like GPT-4, signaling a global trend where governments view frontier AI not just as a commercial product, but as a strategic national asset requiring state control.

China isn't giving away its AI models out of generosity. By making them open source, it encourages widespread adoption and dependency. Once users are locked into the ecosystem, China can monetize it, introduce ads, or simply lock down future, more advanced versions, giving it significant strategic leverage.

A common misconception is that Chinese AI is fully open-source. The reality is they are often "open-weight," meaning training parameters (weights) are shared, but the underlying code and proprietary datasets are not. This provides a competitive advantage by enabling adoption while maintaining some control.

China's strategy of open-sourcing near-frontier AI models is a calculated move to create pricing pressure and market disruption for Western AI companies. This benefits China's global standing by creating disturbances, as seen with the DeepSeek model release. Considering export controls marks a potential pivot from this disruptive strategy.