How do you use DeepSeek on your laptop? Check out this video!
AI Distillation Explained: How Smaller Labs Are Challenging Big Tech
AI distillation is emerging as a major concern for big tech companies, as it allows smaller AI labs to create powerful models at a fraction of the cost. The technique involves using outputs from advanced AI models (like OpenAI’s GPT) to train cheaper, smaller models that perform nearly as well. Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has been accused of distilling OpenAI’s models, potentially reducing the value of OpenAI’s proprietary technology.
- AI Distillation Threatens Big Tech – Smaller AI labs can now replicate powerful AI models cheaply, reducing the competitive advantage of Google, OpenAI, and Meta.
- DeepSeek Accused of Distillation – OpenAI suspects DeepSeek used ChatGPT’s outputs to train its own models.
- Billions vs. Millions – While big tech spends billions, companies like DeepSeek are proving AI can be developed for far less.
Source: WSJ
AI Takes Over Research: OpenAI’s Deep Research Automates Knowledge Work
OpenAI has launched Deep Research, an AI-powered agent designed to automate and streamline research tasks. Built on an optimized version of the o3 model, the tool can independently gather, analyze, and synthesize vast amounts of web data into a structured report within 5 to 30 minutes. Deep Research is particularly beneficial for professionals in finance, science, policy, and engineering, who require in-depth, niche information. The reports include clear citations and reasoning breakdowns, allowing users to verify accuracy. While OpenAI claims that Deep Research hallucinates less than previous models, it still requires human oversight. The tool is currently available only to ChatGPT Pro users ($200/month), with plans to expand access to other tiers. OpenAI's move comes amid growing competition, particularly from Google's Gemini Deep Research and Microsoft's Think Deeper features.
- AI-Powered Research Automation – Deep Research can generate structured research reports independently, reducing hours of work to minutes.
- Targeted at Professionals – Designed for experts in finance, science, and policy who need reliable, high-quality research.
- Limited Access & Cost – Available only to ChatGPT Pro users at $200/month, but OpenAI plans to expand access over time.
Source: ZDNet
DeepSeek Crackdown: New US Law Could Mean Prison for Users
A newly proposed US law could impose harsh penalties on individuals and businesses using DeepSeek, a Chinese AI chatbot that recently surged in popularity. Introduced by Senator Josh Hawley, the bill aims to block AI technology from China by prohibiting US individuals and companies from engaging with Chinese-developed AI models. The legislation doesn't mention DeepSeek by name, but its release coincided with the app becoming the most popular AI tool in the US, leading to concerns about national security and data privacy. Those violating the law could face up to 20 years in prison or fines of $1 million for individuals and $100 million for businesses. The US Navy and NASA have already banned DeepSeek on government devices, and Texas became the first state to restrict its use.
- Proposed Ban on Chinese AI – A new law aims to block US individuals and businesses from using Chinese-developed AI models like DeepSeek.
- Severe Legal Consequences – Violations could lead to 20 years in prison or fines of up to $100 million for businesses.
- Security & Privacy Concerns – DeepSeek stores data in China, raising fears over surveillance and national security risks.
Source: Yahoo Finance
Musk’s DOGE Is Building an AI Chatbot for the US Government
Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is developing GSAi, a custom AI chatbot for the US General Services Administration (GSA) as part of President Donald Trump’s AI-first agenda. The chatbot aims to boost productivity for GSA employees by automating tasks like managing government contracts, analyzing procurement data, and drafting memos. The project was initially considering Google’s Gemini, but Musk’s team opted for an in-house AI system instead. DOGE’s broader AI initiatives are focused on cutting government costs, but have sparked controversy, with critics arguing they lack transparency and security reviews. While Musk’s push aligns with Trump’s goal of US AI dominance, some federal employees and civil rights groups worry about the rapid, unchecked adoption of AI in government operations.
- Musk’s Government AI Chatbot – DOGE is building GSAi, an AI assistant for the General Services Administration to streamline government tasks.
- Part of Trump’s AI-First Agenda – The project aligns with Trump’s goal of making the US a global leader in AI and reducing government costs.
- Controversy & Security Concerns – Critics warn about lack of oversight, while employees worry about AI’s impact on government transparency.
Source: Wired
Is Amazon Overspending? AI Race Heats Up with $100B Investment
Amazon has announced plans to spend $100 billion in capital expenditures in 2025, largely focused on AI infrastructure. This is a significant increase from $83 billion in 2024 and aligns with Amazon’s strategy to compete with AI leaders like OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft. The company is investing heavily in data centers, networking hardware, and AI chips to support AWS cloud AI services. CEO Andy Jassy emphasized that AI represents a "once-in-a-lifetime business opportunity", reassuring investors that this spending will drive long-term growth. However, skepticism is rising in the tech industry following the rapid and low-cost success of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek, which developed a competitive AI model for under $6 million. This has raised questions about whether big tech's massive AI spending is truly necessary.
- Amazon’s $100B AI Investment – The company is making one of its largest-ever AI investments, focusing on cloud infrastructure and AI development.
- Race Against Competitors – Amazon is competing with Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI, all of whom are also spending tens of billions on AI.
- DeepSeek Disrupts AI Economics – The low-cost success of DeepSeek’s AI raises concerns about whether such massive AI investments are sustainable.
Source: CNBC
Author: Malik Datardina, CPA, CA, CISA. Malik works at Auvenir as a Sr. AI Product Manager who is working to transform the engagement experience for accounting firms and their clients. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent UWCISA, UW, Auvenir (or its affiliates), CPA Canada or anyone else. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. The model provided suggestions and completions to help me write, but the final content and opinions are my own.
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