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The US accuses China of "distillation"—querying American AI models millions of times to reverse-engineer their logic and capabilities. This marks a shift from commercial competition to industrial-scale intellectual property theft, escalating the geopolitical conflict beyond government rhetoric.

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Leading AI labs, despite intense competition, are collaborating through the Frontier Model Forum to detect and prevent Chinese firms from creating imitation models. This rare alliance is driven by the shared existential threat that 'adversarial distillation' poses to their business models and to U.S. national security.

The push for stricter US government action against China's AI practices is not just from politicians. Leading AI companies like OpenAI and Anthropic are pressuring Washington to curb Chinese 'distillation' of their models, framing it as a threat to national security and America's lead in AI.

Despite impressive models from companies like DeepSeek, China's AI ecosystem is heavily reliant on "distilling"—essentially copying and refining—open-source models from the US. This dependency on an external innovation engine is a major weakness in their national strategy to achieve genuine AI leadership and self-sufficiency.

Despite intense domestic rivalry, top US AI labs like OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google are collaborating to detect "adversarial distillation"—where Chinese firms copy their models. This rare cooperation shows the shared commercial and national security threat from foreign competitors outweighs their direct competition.

China is gaining an efficiency edge in AI by using "distillation"—training smaller, cheaper models from larger ones. This "train the trainer" approach is much faster and challenges the capital-intensive US strategy, highlighting how inefficient and "bloated" current Western foundational models are.

US officials and AI labs allege Chinese firms are engaged in industrial-scale IP theft. They reportedly use fraudulent accounts to extract capabilities from US models like Claude to train their own, creating a facade of domestic innovation.

Leading Chinese AI models like Kimi appear to be primarily trained on the outputs of US models (a process called distillation) rather than being built from scratch. This suggests China's progress is constrained by its ability to scrape and fine-tune American APIs, indicating the U.S. still holds a significant architectural and innovation advantage in foundational AI.

Chinese firms are closing the AI capability gap by using "distillation" to replicate the intelligence of leading US models. This creates a strategic vulnerability, as copying software models is easier than replicating China's hardware manufacturing prowess.

Sebastian Malabai argues that U.S. chip export bans are ineffective because China circumvents them by renting GPU capacity in other countries and using "distillation" to reverse-engineer and copycat advanced U.S. models. This suggests a need for a new strategy focused on collaborative safety.

Foreign entities, primarily in China, are reportedly running industrial-scale campaigns to steal capabilities from U.S. frontier AI systems. They use tens of thousands of proxy accounts and jailbreaking techniques to systematically extract proprietary information, prompting the U.S. government to form a dedicated task force.