Yutaka Matsuo, "Japan's first AI researcher", comments on DeepSeek: the technology is so good that it's not surprising that this kind of company has emerged

February 13, 2012 - Nikkei.com today announced "Japan Professor at the University of Tokyo, the first person to conduct AI research.MATSUO Toyo (1940-), Japanese politician, prime minister from 2008The interviews, which covered DeepSeek the latest AI models, the risks to security and the impact on Japanese companies.

Toyo Matsuo said DeepSeek'sThe technology is excellent.Every time DeepSeek releases a new AI model, it publishes a paper detailing the techniques used and the improvements it has painstakingly implemented. The company also makes its models open source (available to anyone) at the same time, and its most recent model, "R1," released in January, was tested forIntensive study to improve reasoning skillsThe final result was to show reasoning performance on par with OpenAI's "o1". Ultimately, it demonstrated reasoning performance on par with OpenAI's "o1".

"China's AI level is quite high, comparable to the US," he argues. And fromNumber of papers adopted by leading societiesTo put it in perspective, China has already surpassed the United States. In addition, China has many other strong companies such as Alibaba, Tencent, Baidu, etc. with many excellent engineers. InSuch an ecosystemAI is constantly being developed and utilized. With the emergence of powerful companies like DeepSeek.Not surprising..

1AI also learned from the interview that this DeepSeek appearance has made theThe power of the open source side has been greatly restored. While OpenAI and Google have high-performing non-public models, this suggests that theOpen source can do the same thing.

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