Impakter
  • Environment
    • Biodiversity
    • Climate Change
    • Circular Economy
    • Energy
  • FINANCE
    • ESG News
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Business
  • TECH
    • Start-up
    • AI & Machine Learning
    • Green Tech
  • Industry News
    • Entertainment
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Health
    • Politics & Foreign Affairs
    • Philanthropy
    • Science
    • Sport
  • Editorial Series
    • SDGs Series
    • Shape Your Future
    • Sustainable Cities
      • Copenhagen
      • San Francisco
      • Seattle
      • Sydney
  • About us
    • Company
    • Team
    • Partners
    • Write for Impakter
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Impakter logo
No Result
View All Result
DeepSeek

Open Source and Under Control: The Deepseek Paradox

DeepSeek has emerged on the front line of debates determining the future of AI, but its arrival poses questions over who decides what "intelligence" we need

Haiqing Yu - Professor at RMIT University & Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making & SocietybyHaiqing Yu - Professor at RMIT University & Chief Investigator at the ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making & Society
February 5, 2025
in AI & MACHINE LEARNING, Society
0

Chinese company DeepSeek stands at the crossroads of two major battles shaping artificial intelligence (AI) development: whether source code should be freely available and whether development should happen in free or controlled-information environments.

That also highlights the DeepSeek paradox. It champions open-source AI — where the source code of the underlying model is available for others to use or modify — while operating in China, one of the world’s most-controlled data environments.

That means DeepSeek prompts obvious questions about who decides what kind of “intelligence” we need. Such questions are obviously front of mind for some governments, with several already placing restrictions on the use of DeepSeek.

DeepSeek, a Chinese startup, unveiled its AI chatbot late last month. It seemed to equal the performance of US models at a fraction of the cost and the news triggered a massive sell-off of tech company shares on the US sharemarket.

It also sparked concerns about data security and censorship. In Australia, DeepSeek has been banned from all federal government devices, the NSW government has reportedly banned it from its devices and systems and other state governments are considering their options. The Australian ban followed similar action by Taiwan, Italy and some US government agencies.

The Australian government says the bans are not related to DeepSeek’s country of origin, but the issues being raised now are similar to those discussed when Chinese-based social media app TikTok was banned on Australian government devices two years ago.

Yet aside from those concerns and DeepSeek’s role in reshaping the power dynamics in the US-China AI rivalry, it also gives hope to less well-resourced countries to develop their own large language models using DeepSeek’s model as a starting point.

For those seeking Chinese-related pop culture references, DeepSeek is a Monkey King moment in the global AI landscape.

Monkey King, or Wukong in Chinese, was a character featured in the 16th century novel “Journey to the West.”

The story was popularised in the 1980s television series “Monkey” and later iterations. In these stories, Wukong was the unpredictable force challenging established power, wreaking havoc in the Heavenly Palace and embodying both defiance and restraint.

That’s a pretty apt description for where DeepSeek stands in the AI world in 2025.

DeepSeek methods: A new benchmark

As the author of a recent Forbes piece rightly points out, the real story about DeepSeek is not about geopolitics but “about the growing power of open-source AI and how it’s upending the traditional dominance of closed-source models.”

Author Kolawole Samuel Adebayo says it’s a line of thought that Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun also shares.

The AI industry has long been divided between closed-source titans like OpenAI, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and Baidu and the open-source movement, which includes Meta, Stability AI, Mosaic ML as well as universities and research institutes.

DeepSeek’s adoption of open-source methodologies — building on Meta’s open-source Llama models and the PyTorch ecosystem — places it firmly in the open-source camp.

While closed-source large language models prioritise controlled innovation, open-source large language models are built on the principles of collaborative innovation, sharing and transparency.

DeepSeek’s innovative methods challenge the notion that AI development is backed by vast proprietary datasets and computational power, measured by the number and capacity of chips.

It also demonstrates a point made by the Australian Institute for Machine Learning’s Deval Shah three months before DeepSeek made global headlines: “The future of LLM [large language model] scaling may lie not just in larger models or more training data, but in more sophisticated approaches to training and inference.”

The DeepSeek case illustrates that algorithmic ingenuity can compensate for hardware and computing limitations, which is significant in the context of US export controls on high-end AI chips to China. That’s a crucial lesson for any nation or company restricted by computational bottlenecks.

It suggests that an alternative path exists — one where innovation is driven by smarter algorithms rather than sheer hardware dominance.

Just as Wukong defied the gods with his wit and agility, DeepSeek has shown that brute strength, or in this case raw computing power, is not the only determinant of AI success.

However, DeepSeek’s victory in the open-source battle does not mean it has won the war.

It faces the toughest challenges for the road ahead, particularly when it comes to scale, refinement and two of the greatest strengths of US AI companies — data quality and reliability.

DeepSeek’s Achilles’ heel

DeepSeek appears to have broken free from the limitations of computing dependence, but it remains bound by China’s controlled information environment, which is an even greater constraint.

Unlike ChatGPT or Llama, which train on vast, diverse and uncensored global datasets, DeepSeek operates in the palm of the Buddha — the walled garden that is the Chinese government-approved information ecosystem.

While China’s AI models are technically impressive and perform brilliantly on technical or general questions, they are fundamentally limited by the data they can access, the responses they can generate and the narratives they are allowed to shape.

This is particularly so when it comes to freedom of expression and was illustrated by a small test conducted on 29 January 2025. DeepSeek was asked questions about the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and massacre.

DeepSeek
Screenshot and translation of DeepSeek test provided by the author.

In the test, DeepSeek was asked three questions, two in Chinese and one in English. It refused to answer the first and third question and evaded the second question.

ChatGPT, on the other hand, gives a thorough analysis to all three questions.

The test — among many other queries on sensitive topics — exposes the double bind facing Chinese AI: Can its large language model be truly world-class if it is constrained in what data it can ingest and what output it can generate? Can it be trustworthy if it fails the reliability test?

This is not merely a technical issue — it’s a political and philosophical dilemma.


Related Articles: ChatGPT and Me: On the Benefits and Dangers of Artificial Intelligence | The New AI Legislation in Europe: Good Enough? | Why Deepseek’s AI Leap Only Puts China in Front for Now

In contrast to models like GPT-4, which can engage in free-form debate, DeepSeek operates within an internet space where sensitive topics must be avoided.

DeepSeek may have championed open-source large language models with its Chinese discourse of efficiency and ingenuity, but it remains imprisoned by a deeper limitation: data and regulatory constraints.

While its technical prowess lies in its reliance on and contribution to openness in code, it operates within an information “greenhouse,” where production of and access to critical and diverse datasets are “protected.” In other words, such datasets are restricted.

This is where the Monkey King metaphor comes full circle. Just as Wukong believed he had escaped but only to realize he was still inside the Buddha’s palm, DeepSeek appears to have achieved independence — yet remains firmly within the grip of the Chinese Communist Party.

It embodies the most radical spirit of AI transparency, yet it is fundamentally constrained in what it can see and say. No matter how powerful it becomes, it is hard to evolve beyond the ideological limits imposed upon it.

The true disruption in generative AI is not technical; it is philosophical.

As we move toward generative AI agency and superintelligent AI, the debate might no longer be about finding our own place in the workforce or cognitive hierarchy, or whether large language models should be open or closed.

Instead, we could be asking: What kind of “intelligence” do we need and — more importantly — who gets to decide?

** **

This article was originally published by 360info™.


Editor’s Note: The opinions expressed here by the authors are their own, not those of Impakter.com — In the Cover Photo: DeepSeek is a Monkey King moment in the global AI landscape. Cover Photo Credit: Illustration by Michael Joiner, 360info. Images by William Tung, Wikimedia & Akash Tetwal, Pexels.

Tags: AIAmazonartificial intelligenceChatGPTchinaDeepSeekDeepSeek banGoogleMetaMicrosoftMosaic MLNvidiaOpen SourceOpenAIStability AIUnited States
Previous Post

How to Use Private Property Maps for Landscaping and Development

Next Post

Trump Regime Week 2: More Chaos, What It Means

Related Posts

Farewell to Soft Power
Politics & Foreign Affairs

Farewell to Soft Power

The Caribbean and the Arctic seem to have little in common. The same cannot be said of Venezuela and Greenland,...

byMichele Gimondo, Catholic University of Sacred Heart, Milan
February 19, 2026
Microsoft Matches 100% of Its Electricity Use With Renewables
Business

Microsoft Matches 100% of Its Electricity Use With Renewables

Today’s ESG Updates Microsoft Matches 100% of Its Electricity Use with Renewables: The announcement is a major step toward its...

byAriq Haidar
February 19, 2026
If AI Steals Our Jobs, Who’ll Be Left to Buy Stuff?
AI & MACHINE LEARNING

If AI Steals Our Jobs, Who’ll Be Left to Buy Stuff?

The question is one of increasing urgency: What will workers do when technology does most of the work? In April...

byDr Manoj Pant - Former Vice-Chancellor of the Indian Institute of Foreign Trade & Visiting Professor at the Shiv Nadar Institution of Eminenceand1 others
February 18, 2026
ESG News regarding Trump criticizing Newsom over UK green energy agreement, new analysis questioning the climate benefits of AI, EU greenlighting €1.04 billion Danish programme to reduce farm emissions and restore wetlands, and Santos winning court case over alleged misleading net-zero claims.
Business

Trump Slams Newsom Over UK Green Energy Deal

Today’s ESG Updates: Trump Slams Newsom’s UK Green Deal: Criticizes California governor for signing a clean energy agreement with the...

byAnastasiia Barmotina
February 17, 2026
How Climate Change Is Reshaping Arctic Geopolitics
Climate Change

How Climate Change Is Reshaping Arctic Geopolitics

Once a remote and largely inaccessible region, the Arctic has become the focus of far-reaching international developments. In recent years, competition among...

byPier Paolo Raimondi - Senior Researcher at the Energy, Climate and Resources (ECR) Program of the Istituto Affari Internazionali (IAI)
February 17, 2026
ESG News regarding Tehran Dispatches Technical Team for Renewed Nuclear Dialogue; Italy Proposes Temporary Sea Entry Bans; Labour Market Slowdown in UK; India Hosts Global Tech Leaders in AI Investment Push
Business

Iran-US Nuclear Diplomacy Returns to Geneva

Today’s ESG Updates Switzerland Maintains Intermediary Role in U.S. - Iran Contacts: Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi arrives in Geneva...

byPuja Doshi
February 16, 2026
REAIM speaker stands in front of an image that reads "Real or fake?"
AI & MACHINE LEARNING

Deepfake Fraud Goes Mainstream

We have all done it. We’ve all seen a video on the internet, maybe a cute video of a cat...

bySarah Perras
February 13, 2026
The uncertainty created by anti-ESG statutes has complicated compliance and contract bidding strategies, particularly for firms operating across multiple states with divergent policy approaches.
Climate Change

Texas Anti-ESG Law Declared Unconstitutional

This Week's Regulatory Updates U.S. Judge Strikes Down Texas Anti-ESG Law: A federal judge has declared Texas’ anti-ESG investment law...

byFedor Sukhoi
February 13, 2026
Next Post
Trump Regime Week 2: More Chaos, What It Means

Trump Regime Week 2: More Chaos, What It Means

Recent News

A woman starting her Insurance agent Skill Development program.

Blended Learning Approaches for Insurance Agent Skill Development

February 19, 2026
Northern Kenya drought and hunger crisis affecting pastoral communities

Northern Kenya Drought and Hunger Crisis Worsens Amid Aid Cuts

February 19, 2026
Farewell to Soft Power

Farewell to Soft Power

February 19, 2026
  • ESG News
  • Sustainable Finance
  • Business

© 2025 Impakter.com owned by Klimado GmbH

No Result
View All Result
  • Environment
    • Biodiversity
    • Climate Change
    • Circular Economy
    • Energy
  • FINANCE
    • ESG News
    • Sustainable Finance
    • Business
  • TECH
    • Start-up
    • AI & Machine Learning
    • Green Tech
  • Industry News
    • Entertainment
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Health
    • Politics & Foreign Affairs
    • Philanthropy
    • Science
    • Sport
  • Editorial Series
    • SDGs Series
    • Shape Your Future
    • Sustainable Cities
      • Copenhagen
      • San Francisco
      • Seattle
      • Sydney
  • About us
    • Company
    • Team
    • Partners
    • Write for Impakter
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy

© 2025 Impakter.com owned by Klimado GmbH