The development of AI
Sam Altman: Open AI is on the wrong side of history
Open AI is on the wrong side of history when it has chosen not to have open source code, writes CEO Sam Altman in a question-and-answer thread on Reddit. Several other models – including the Chinese Deep Seek – show how the language model reasons when it comes to an answer.
“We are discussing this, I personally think we have been on the wrong side of history here and need to think of a different strategy,” Altman writes about the source code.
Not everyone at the company agrees, he adds. Open AI's product manager Kevin Weil writes that he is open to showing more of the source code in older models, and possibly a little more about how the language model reasons.
Sam Altman: Open AI is on the wrong side of history
Open AI is on the wrong side of history when it has chosen not to have open source code, writes CEO Sam Altman in a question-and-answer thread on Reddit. Several other models – including the Chinese Deep Seek – show how the language model reasons when it comes to an answer.
“We are discussing this, I personally think we have been on the wrong side of history here and need to think of a different strategy,” Altman writes about the source code.
Not everyone at the company agrees, he adds. Open AI's product manager Kevin Weil writes that he is open to showing more of the source code in older models, and possibly a little more about how the language model reasons.
The development of AI
Report: Deep Seek costs more than it seems
The Chinese AI model Deep Seek hit Wall Street like a bomb this week. With a reported cost of training the language model of $5.6 million, investors began to wonder whether the huge sums in the American giants really pay off.
A recent report from the analysis firm Semianalysis nuances the picture. The sum of $5.6 million does not include hardware, research, developing the algorithm or data to train on. The hardware alone should have cost over $500 million, the analysis firm writes, according to CNBC.
Trump's tariffs
"On Monday, there will be negative reactions on the stock market"
Donald Trump's tariffs against Mexico, Canada and China that were introduced this weekend will give negative stock market reactions on Monday, predicts SEB economist Robert Bergqvist in an interview with TT.
He points out that Wall Street's broad index was up 1 percent before the news about the tariffs - and that it then fell to minus 0.5 percent. Bergqvist believes that the trend will continue.
- On Monday, there will be negative reactions on the stock markets. This is not good for the US and it is not good for the world economy.
However, he points out that this applies in the short term, and that Trump will be sensitive to stock market declines and thus adjust his policies.
"On Monday, there will be negative reactions on the stock market"
Donald Trump's tariffs against Mexico, Canada and China that were introduced this weekend will give negative stock market reactions on Monday, predicts SEB economist Robert Bergqvist in an interview with TT.
He points out that Wall Street's broad index was up 1 percent before the news about the tariffs - and that it then fell to minus 0.5 percent. Bergqvist believes that the trend will continue.
- On Monday, there will be negative reactions on the stock markets. This is not good for the US and it is not good for the world economy.
However, he points out that this applies in the short term, and that Trump will be sensitive to stock market declines and thus adjust his policies.
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