Chinese AI "Kimi": Open-source models are approaching the cutting edge

CEO Yang Zhilin of Chinese company Moonshot AI, the developer of the generative AI “Kimi K2.5,” said on March 17 that open-source models are closing in on the very cutting edge. Moonshot AI has adopted an open-source approach, and it has shown a willingness to stand up to U.S. AI, which is dominated by closed-source models. (Note: This article is translated from a Japanese original.)

Yang Zhilin attended Nvidia’s annual technology event “GTC” held in San Jose, California, in the United States. He delivered a speech themed “How We Scaled Kimi K2.5.” Since its release in January, Kimi K2.5 has drawn a lot of attention for its high performance.

Yang Zhilin pointed out that one of our goals is to build better open-source models. We believe in the democratization of intelligence. He also emphasized the advantages, saying that it is not used as a black box, but that all the contents of the model can be accessed.

To continue reading, please click here to go to the Nikkei Chinese website

The Japanese Economic News agency and the Financial Times merged into the same media group in November 2015. The alliance formed by two newspapers—one Japanese and one British—both founded in the 19th century is moving forward with wide-ranging cooperation, including joint special features, under the banner of “high-quality, the strongest economic journalism.” This time, as part of that effort, articles are being exchanged between the Chinese websites of the two newspapers.

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