Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 453: AI News That Matters - February 3rd, 2025
Episode Date: February 3, 2025Did DeepSeek really train a chart-topping LLM for $5 million? Google Gemini quietly updated its AI chatbot. And OpenAI released a new model. That's just the beginning of impactful AI news this we...ek. Join us on Mondays as we do the AI news that matters. Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan questions on AIUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTopics Covered in This Episode:1. DeepSeek's AI Model2. OpenAI's Plans and Developments3. Important Updates from Other Tech Giants4. US Copyright Office’s Stance on AI Content5. Market Scene Around AITimestamps:00:00 AI Breakthroughs and Costs Analyzed05:52 AI Market Shifts: NVIDIA & OpenAI Impact08:04 DeepSeek's AI Controversy and Impact12:11 Microsoft Hosts Controversial DeepSeek Model17:04 AI Outputs Lack Copyright Protection20:28 AI and Copyright Challenges22:31 SoftBank Boosts OpenAI Investment25:41 OpenAI Releases Free Advanced Model29:55 OpenAI's Internet-Connected AI ModelKeywords:AI, DeepSeek's AI model, copyright ruling, OpenAI, reasoning model, o three Mini, AI infrastructure plan, Stargate, DeepSeek's hardware expenditure, SemiAnalysis report, NVIDIA, US economy, US National Security Council, distillation technique, Microsoft, Azure cloud service, Google Gemini, US copyright case, copyright law, SoftBank Group, funding round, chain of thought reasoning technique, AI agents, Oracle, supply chain management, Internet connection, code development, business intelligence, data, ChatGPTgovSend Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
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This is the Everyday AI Show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips.
Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life.
Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in Adobe Firefly, the all-in-one creative AI studio.
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The assistant accelerates execution.
Did Deepseek's groundbreaking AI model really cost only five-ish million dollars to train?
A new analysis says it costs way more.
A new copyright ruling on AI dropped, but hardly no one noticed or pay attention.
An open AI not only dropped an impressive new reasoning model in 03 Mini, but they're eyeing a $40 billion capital in Fiori,
just a week after announcing the $500 billion AI infrastructure plan in Stargate.
Yeah, if you thought AI news was going to slow down, you know,
it's the end of December was ramping up.
So we're going to have a slow fourth quarter.
Absolutely not.
There is so much to cover.
We're going to be talking about those three stories and a whole lot more today on Everyday AI.
What's going on, y'all?
My name's Jordan Wilson, and I'm the host of Everyday AI.
And this thing's for you.
It is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter helping us all not just learn
AI, but how we can keep up with all this stuff that's happening because it's AI is literally
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Guess what's also happening.
Me, our team, we are keeping you up to date because it doesn't just help you to know what's
going on.
You have to know what actually matters and how it's going to impact your company or your
career. So that's what we do. Most Mondays, we're back after a week or two off with our AI
news that matters. So we are back for the week of February 3rd. And if you're new here, yeah,
like I said, we do this almost every single Monday going over the top news. One other thing,
if you are brand new here, maybe checking us out on the podcast. Thank you. Check your show notes
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Live stream audience.
Does y'all stick with our 2025 AI predictions and roadmap series?
It is still highly relevant.
You know, a lot of things that we're going to be talking about today predicted this two weeks ago when we released it.
So make sure you go listen to those on our website.
All right.
Without further ado, let's get into the AI News that matters for the week of February 3rd, 2025.
So let's talk about the hot topic.
All right.
And FYI, y'all, I'm going to have a dedicated show on DeepSeek later this week.
I intentionally took a lot of time on this.
People were reaching out, Jordan, give us your take on Deep Seek.
I said, nope, it's too soon.
All right.
But here's one of the reasons why, apparently, according to a new,
new report, Deepseek spent maybe a little bit more than it was initially believed training their new
models. So according to a new report, Deep Seek's hardware expenditure is estimated to be significantly
higher than $500 million. And that's according to a new report by semi-analysis. So despite these
reported high hardware costs, Deepseek AI reported that its model training costs were only about
5.5 million dollars. Yeah, pretty stark contrast between $5.5 million in every single other state-of-the-art
large language model that's ever been trained, usually for about 10 to 20 times that cost.
And obviously, when DeepSeek, you know, with both their V3 and their R1 reasoning model,
when they said, hey, we only spent $5.5 million to train this model. The entire U.S. stock market went up in
arms lost more than $2 trillion in market cap in reaction to this news.
Y'all speaking to that 2025 AI roadmap, I warned you of this.
I said this is going to happen, right, before it happened.
So I wouldn't pay too much attention to it, although I think Wall Street got tricked.
I think journalists got tricked.
I think your favorite social media AI person got tricked.
Guess who didn't me?
Yeah.
Go back.
You know what?
I'm already starting on a hot.
on a hot take Tuesday, even though it's the news that matters Monday.
Go see who you follow in AI and go see what they said two weeks ago about Deepseek and then
check back in with me in two weeks.
You know, I'm a former journalist.
So I was not surprised that a lot of large news organizations essentially just copy and
pasted what Deep Seek said and did not look into it, which is one of the reasons, among many
others that, you know, the U.S. stock market saw a huge swing.
But the new report from semi-analysis highlights the substantial compute power needed for generating synthetic data,
a key factor in DeepSeaks reported hardware spending.
So Deepseek's R1 model has been praised for its capabilities with experts noting its rapid advancements
despite U.S. restrictions on chip exports to China.
Yeah, that's one of the biggest things.
It's like there's only like one chip from Nvidia that can make a state-of-the-art model like this and, right,
reportedly Deepseek in their last training run, this one that cost $5.6 million, wasn't using them.
Again, these are all according to reports in what DeepSeek AI itself said.
So obviously at the center of all this was number one, NVIDIA, right?
Saw their stock price go down, I believe it was, by 17% over the course of like two days,
because now everyone said, oh, it's so cheap.
And you don't need NVIDIA's highest powered AI to, or,
their highest powered GPUs to train a state-of-the-art model.
More on that later this week when we go in depth into the whole DeepSeek saga on our show.
But it was probably two of the companies in the spotlight, aside from Deepseek were Nvidia and OpenAI, right?
Open AI, by far, the leader in the large language model game reportedly spent about $100 million
training their old GPT4 model.
So they were kind of thrust in the spotlight.
So Open AI CEO, Sam Altman,
acknowledge the quality of the deep seek model
and emphasize the competitive nature of the AI industry.
And also concerns obviously have been raised
about the U.S. potentially lagging behind China in AI development.
Another thing I told you was going to happen in 2025,
we were going to see China leapfrog the U.S.
And yeah, I called a lot of these quote unquote,
open source AI models, Trojan horses.
All right.
So we'll see how that actually plays out.
All right.
Our next piece of AI news obviously related because this really shook up the entire
U.S. economy, not just the AI, the generative AI space, the large language model players,
big tech, no, the U.S. economy.
But Open AI, at first they were like, okay, good job, Deepseek.
And then we saw the reporting where Open AI is scrutinizing DeepSeek for allegedly using
Open AI's own models to distill or to help make their own model.
So according to reports, OpenAI is investigating allegations that DeepSeek used OpenAIs AI's
AI models to create its competing chat pot.
So that was first reported by Bloomberg.
So like we talked about, DeepSeek's chatbot caused a significant market disruption,
causing AI linked U.S. tech stocks to lose about $2 trillion in market cap.
A lot of that has since been recovered, but pretty significant.
Anytime you see $2 trillion in market cap erased from the U.S. economy, pretty big deal.
So DeepSeek claimed that its AI model was developed at a fraction of the cost and hardware needed compared to rivals like OpenAI, Claude, Google, etc.
So OpenAI's CEO, Sam Altman initially expressed admiration for Deepseek, but did later acknowledge evidence of,
of distillation or a technique where smaller models replicate larger models, right?
So you have this whole kind of like teacher, student paradigm between the models where, you know,
quote unquote, smaller companies are just using outputs from larger models to distill information
or to take or borrow outputs from a larger model to train theirs, which is against almost every single
proprietary large language models terms of service such as open AI. So this is this is happening quickly,
y'all. And in our daily newsletter, we'll continue to keep you up to date as we have this week.
But the U.S. Navy, interestingly enough, has banned DeepSeaks apps due to potential security
and ethical concerns. And the U.S. National Security Council is evaluating the AI apps
implications. So yeah, yes, Deep Seeks, you can download it, right? It is not a true open source model.
All right. I'll get into that later in the week. But it is a fairly open source model in the same way that
Mattis Lama, it's fairly open source, not 100%. But yes, so people are kind of missing the point.
Everyone's like, oh, you can, you know, download it. It's open source. Well, it's not really open source
according to all of the rules for open, like for something to be considered truly open source.
But most people are still just using it via the app interface.
So there's a lot of intricacies with data sharing and really just privacy concerns, right,
in the same way that, you know, the whole TikTok ban was being talked about for two plus years.
It was banned for, I don't know, a day all the teenagers went crazy.
U.S. President Trump reinstated TikTok, but they are on a shot clock.
now. So I think we're going to be seeing the same things. At least the app on the iPhone could be
banned, right? So it topped the U.S. charts for free iOS apps, right? So a lot of people, you know,
downloaded DeepSeek on their phone, on their iPhones. I wouldn't be surprised if it does get
banned in the U.S. eventually. It's already been banned in other countries, such as Italy. So the
situation is presenting a significant challenge for Silicon Valley in the global AI competition.
Also, David Sacks Trump's AI advisor and Tsar, I think, suggested that intellectual property
theft may have occurred by Deepseek.
So, you know, it's not just open AI and, you know, reporters hinting at this.
This is from now someone in Donald Trump's official kind of government in an official government
role accusing Deepseek of distilling from OpenAI's model, which is not legal, at least according
to OpenAI's terms of service. And you might be wondering, okay, well, what's the big deal?
Well, I mean, number one, most people aren't downloading this thing and running it locally.
Number one. Number two, data privacy and concerns. It's a lot different, you know, if you are giving
your data, especially as a business, you know, to a meta, to a Google, to a
Microsoft to a Open AI, right?
Because at least here in the U.S., and I know we have listeners from all over the world,
but I am putting this, I live in the U.S., the majority of our listeners live in the U.S.,
so I am putting this through that point of view.
There's a lot of huge concerns when you are essentially connecting all of your business data
and uploading it and sending it to a company based in China.
You really have to understand how China treats its data.
its link to the government, which is not the same here in the U.S.
So more on that later in the week.
All right.
More DeepSeek news, and this one gets a little weird because Microsoft has announced
that it will host DeepSeekR1 on its Azure cloud service, despite those exact accusations
that we just talked about.
So yes, it now looks like OpenAI is rightfully so pointing the finger at Deepseek,
yet Microsoft, which is one of the biggest backers of Open AI, did just announce that they will be
making the R1, the reasoning model from DeepSeek available on its Azure platform.
So, yeah, pretty noteworthy as it involves a major player in AI, Microsoft, which like I said,
is Open AI's largest investor, now offering access to the model accused of violating Open AI's
terms of service.
And not only that, but from the company that I think was maybe kind of tricking the U.S. economy
into going down.
More on that flavor this week.
So Microsoft's decision to host R1 is seen as making it more legitimate in the business community,
despite that ongoing dispute and the probe into data extraction practices by deepseek.
Also, Microsoft announced open AIs.
O-1 reasoning model would be made available to even free users in Microsoft copilot,
enhancing co-pilot's ability to address complex questions with their think-deeper feature,
which was previously only available to copilot pro subscribers.
So yes, now you do have the O-1 reasoning available to even co-pilot free subscribers.
All right.
Our next piece of AI news, yeah, a lot with OpenAI.
this week, y'all. So OpenAI announced partnerships with the U.S. government to enhance research
across various fields using AI, marking a significant step in AI's role in advancing science and
national security. So approximately 15,000 scientists across diverse disciplines within the U.S.
government will gain access to Open AI's latest reasoning models, according to the announcement.
So researchers from Los Alamos, Lawrence Livermore, and Sandia National Labs, so those are all U.S. government entities, will utilize 01 or another O-S. series model.
All right.
So on Venado, which is an NVIDIA supercomputer at Los Alamos, with Microsoft's support in deployment.
So OpenAI also announced chat GPTGov, a secure AI solution designed specifically for U.S.
government agencies to use chat GBT.
So agencies can self-host, that's an interesting one.
Agencies can self-host chat GBT to manage security and compliance, reducing risks
tied to handling classified information with external AI models.
All right, moving on from OpenAI, at least for a couple of stories here.
Google has announced the rollout of Gemini 2.0 Flash, which promises faster responses
and improved performance for users on desktop and mobile platforms.
So the update is currently more widely available on the desktop with mobile users on the Google Pixel smartphone still experiencing the previous versions.
So Gemini 2.0 Flash enhances tasks such as writing, brainstorming, and learning by providing a smoother user experience.
The model also offers improved response to image inputs, although free users can only upload images and not other
file types. So previously only available to Gemini advance subscribers, the 2.0 flash model is now
accessible to all users providing a significant update from the 1.0 flash model. Yeah, this is
pretty big because the front end of Google Gemini up until December, they weren't really
transparent in what version you were running. Right. So I actually did a ton of digging,
even reaching out to people at Google. And finally, I essentially got to
a hint that up until December, for the most part, the model that you were using, you know,
if you go to Gemini.com, right? So it's different than if you're, you know, using Vertex or Google
AI studio on the back end. But if you were just logging in and using the Gemini chatbot,
you were generally using a version of Gemini that was six to nine months outdated, which is not
good. So that changed in December. But now we have the official version of 2.0 Flash, where previously
we had an experimental version of the Gemini 2.0 model,
but now we have the official Gemini 2.0 flash inside of Google Gemini and the Google Gemini app.
All right.
A big U.S. copyright case that I didn't really see a lot of people talking about.
So I think it's important to chat about it.
So this is the second kind of quote unquote ruling or kind of paper to come out of the U.S.
Copyright Office, and there will be more.
So the U.S. Copyright Office has issued guidance stating that AI generated outputs based
solely on text prompts are not protected by current copyright law.
So this decision highlights the lack of human control in AI generated works, which affects
their ability to be copyrighted.
So this new report from the U.S. Copyright Office emphasizes that AI systems cannot hold
copyrights and users of AI systems are not considered authors of the AI generated outputs.
So the unpredictability of AI outputs, as demonstrated by a Gemini-produced image in the paper,
underscores the lack of user authorship. So the office contrast AI-generated works with traditional
art forms like Jackson Pollock's paintings where human control is evident.
So using AI as a tool to assist human creativity does not.
necessarily jeopardize copyright protection for the final human produced work.
So yeah, this one's a little tricky, right?
So what this report essentially said, if you're using a text-only prompt, probably like,
let's say you're using Mid Journey or, you know, Dali, although I don't think anyone would be
using Dali, although reportedly, according to Open AIs AMA on Reddit, they are closer to
releasing the successor to Dali.
But regardless, if you're just using a prompt, right, to inside mid-jurney or inside any of the stable diffusion models or inside runway, right, inside a video platform, if you're just using a text output, you will very, it's very unlikely that whatever you produce, you will be able to copyright.
All right.
And in instances where there's a lot of kind of human back and forth and even human inputs, right?
So let's say you create a piece of art by hand and then you go in and enhance it with,
you know, in AI in painting from one of these programs, even from something like Adobe Photoshop,
right?
That's where it becomes extremely vague.
I am not a huge fan of this ruling just because of the gray area.
I would say this ruling will link to it in the newsletter and we did last week, but I'd say it's like 90% gray area, right?
because essentially they said in those instances where it's kind of almost like an equal
input of human and AI, they're all going to be kind of judged for their ability to be
copyrighted on a case by case basis, which does not make sense.
I'm not saying I have the answers, but I don't think this is the ruling really anyone was
hoping for because all it really said is, okay, well, if you use text only, you can't copyright that,
I think a lot of people already knew.
And then conversely, the only other kind of new piece of information that I think that we really got is, hey, if you, if it's kind of equal parts human and equal parts AI, it's being tackled on a case-by-case basis.
But the office for the office allows for copyright protection in works that incorporate AI-generated content with significant creative modification.
So, you know, let's say if it's mainly human work with a little bit of AI, you might still be able to get that copyrighted, right?
Which is huge because here's the thing.
In most creative workflows in 2025, it is going to become very hard to create something without the use of AI, right?
And now, you know, we've seen all these stories now of, you know, publications and writers guilds trying to create systems to
prove that your work is not AI generated or AI augmented, which I don't think is going to
accurately work because that's not how generative AI and large language models work either,
or diffusion models, right?
It's very hard to prove or disprove, aside from if you are using a system that does have
an invisible watermarking system, but those are also easy to get around.
So it's a pretty interesting announcement here coming from the second report from the U.S.
Copyright Office.
All right, moving on, $40 billion.
That is billion with a B.
So according to reports, SoftBank Group is in discussions to lead another significant funding round of up to $40 billion for Open AI, potentially valuing the AI behemoth at $300 billion.
This would set a record for a private company investment if this does come to fruition.
So the move highlights the escalating competition in the AI sector, particularly with the Chinese players now, with Deep Seek and Quinn, really entering the fray in late 2024 and really putting their stamp on the race in early 2025.
SoftBank has previously valued OpenAI at $260 billion, a substantial increase from $150 billion.
That was the valuation just a few months ago.
This new round of funding reportedly is expected to be facilitated through convertible notes,
contingent upon Open AI restructuring its business to limit the control of its nonprofit arm,
which is originally how it was founded.
SoftBank reportedly has about $30 billion available for investment,
with the commitment of up to $25 billion, potentially directed towards Open AI,
and its joint venture Stargate, which we talked about in the newsletter quite a bit over the past week or two.
Stargate, if you didn't know, aims to bolsters the U.S. position in the global AI race against China and others,
complimenting SoftBank's previous $15 billion investment into that venture.
So, yeah, now it looks like since SoftBank is one of the main financial supporters of the Stargate project,
that kind of joint venture between what is it, SoftBank, Oracle, Microsoft's in there,
more on the data side.
So now SoftBank reportedly going all in doubly on OpenAI by not just the Stargate financial
support in leading kind of the financial push there, but also in this new round of funding
for Open AI.
So yeah, if you didn't know, the Stargate initiative is a $500 billion joint venture led
by OpenAI, SoftBank, and Oracle, and it aims to expand U.S.'s AI infrastructure with significant
investment in data centers, job creation, and technological advancements.
All right.
Speaking of Oracle, one of the largest companies in the world, just announced big surprise,
advancements in their AI agents' capabilities.
Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision
of its creative suite into one conversational experience.
Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in the Adobe Firefly app, the all-in-one creative
AI studio.
Powered by Adobe's Creative Agent, Firefly AI Assistant lets you start with your vision, just
describe what you want, and shape the outcome as it takes form with the Assistant.
The Assistant orchestrates multi-step workflows, drawing on 60-plus pro-grade tools across
Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Illustrator Premiere, light, light,
Express and more to help bring your ideas to life.
You can also get started with creative skills, a growing library of pre-built workflows for
common creative tasks like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching,
and creating social variations.
Every step the assistant takes is visible so you can refine, redirect, or take over at any
time.
You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director.
Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta.
See it today at Firefly.adobie.com.
So Oracle has introduced new AI agents aimed at enhancing supply chain management during its cloud world event in Austin.
So the AI agents are designed to automate and streamline task for supply chain workers,
improving efficiency and decision making.
Oracle's new AI agentic tools are part of the Oracle Fusion cloud supply chain and manufacturing platform.
That is a mouthful.
full and a half targeting areas like product inspections and delivery instructions.
So the move aligns with the broader tech industries trends.
Everyone's going, you know, agentic in 2024 and 2025, joining the likes of companies like
Microsoft, Google, Amazon, Nvidia, Salesforce, Open AI, everyone else investing heavily in
AI agents.
So Oracle's announcement, obviously like we just talked about, follows the Stargate project
collaboration with OpenAI and SoftBank.
All right.
And then last, but definitely not least, we got a new model that it looks like is going to,
at least from a benchmarks perspective, be the highest or the best new model in the world.
So we'll see how long that lasts until, you know, Quinn or Deepseek or Google or Claude
announces a new model.
but OpenAI has launched the 03 mini reasoning model,
not just that, but also for free.
Yes, so a lot of people are saying this is in response to DeepSeek,
releasing their R1 for free,
but Open AI did just announce this for even free users,
marking the first time a wide audience can access the most advanced models,
which were previously reserved for the $20,
a month chat GPT plus users or the $200 a month chat GPT Pro users.
So there is, yeah, got to love these names here.
But Sam Altman did say that they were trying to fix their naming problem.
So we have two new models, actually, 03 Mini and 03 Mini High.
I know.
And this follows 01, which was before called O1 preview.
And then we had 01 mini.
Then we got rid of 01 preview and just got 01.
But then we also added 01 Pro.
We skipped 02 because of some naming rights over there in the UK from, I believe, a telecom company.
And then we skipped to 03.
But we don't have O3 preview.
We don't have O3 Pro, obviously, not yet.
Instead, we have O3 Mini and O3 Mini high.
Oh, gosh, Head Scratcher.
All right.
Anyways.
So these models use the chain of thought.
reasoning technique and Sam Altman did say that they are going to have a little bit more transparency
in what is actually happening in that chain of thought or those reasoning steps like other models
have a little bit more transparency. Open AI has been a little bit more closed off in showing everyone
kind of exactly what happens underneath the hood aside from a summary. So according to OpenAI,
the O3 Mini response 24% faster than
its predecessor, 01 Mini, okay, so comparing 01 Mini to 03 Mini.
So, O3 Mini responds 64% faster and costs 63% less per input token, though it does remain
about seven times more expensive than non-reasoning models like GPT40 Mini.
But to me, that makes sense, right?
You're not going to use an O-Series model for everything.
If you're a company, right, you're only using it for more complex.
task, right? The reasoning models, I think they are much better for anything in encoding,
software development, STEM, anything in advanced mathematics, business intelligence, right?
I think it's great for reasoners. But one thing that I love, and we did a big 01 pro
episode here on the show. So if you want, you can scroll back and listen to that. It was about
10 to 15 episodes ago. But I think it's also great. These 01-03 models are just
great for dumping a lot of data and saying, hey, this is who I am.
This is what I'm trying to do.
This is, you know, it requires some business logic.
So I think a lot of people are saying, oh, I'm not, I'm not in software development.
I'm not in business intelligent.
Well, do you have a pile of data?
Do you have a job that requires you to think in a multi-step way and make a business
decision based on that data?
Right.
I think it's a, the O1 model completely love it.
I'm using it all the time.
Even though I thought I would still be using the 4-0 model much more.
I'm using the O1 and now the O3 mini-high.
What a name there.
Much more than I thought.
But the launch signals OpenAI's strategy to maintain its edge in AI innovation,
despite increasing competition, like we said,
from more quote unquote, open source models like deep CXV3 and all.
are one, its reasoning model.
But the biggest feature, no one's talking about,
saving what I think is one of the biggest things for last.
It connects to the Internet.
All right.
O3 Mini and O3 Mini, Hi, connect to the Internet,
where the previous 01 Preview, O1, O1 Mini, and 01 Pro,
did not connect to the Internet.
And that is extremely important to be able to quickly query the Internet,
pull in information because one of the biggest things about using a large language model
and why I still tell companies do not use Claude on the front end, right?
If you're using it on the back end, connecting it, you know, with a rad pipeline into your
company's most up-to-date data, sure, right?
But so many companies are using large language models on the front end, right?
They're going to chatchbt.com, claw.com, daI, jemini.com, right?
There's been a lot of problems.
I think Gemini really improved in December, and we've seen these updates roll out.
But Claude, it's still not connected to the internet,
although we've seen some reports that saying they're getting closer to having that,
and then maybe that might be suitable for enterprise companies to use on the front end,
right, on a teams or an enterprise plan.
But, you know, I'm personally very excited that Open AI has included the ability to connect to the web
in the new 03 mini and 03 mini high model.
So there we go, saving what I think is the best little nugget for last.
All right.
that is it. Let me do a very, very quick recap of the AI news that matters for February 3rd.
So according to reports, Deep Seek's hardware cost more than $500 million, throwing a big corkscrew into that hole.
We trained it for $5.5 million.
Open AI is scrutinizing DeepSeek for allegedly using its model for distillation purposes.
Despite all that, our next AI news, Microsoft is hosting.
that somewhat controversial model DeepSeek R1 on its Azure platform.
More OpenAI news, they partnered with the U.S. government, both for those 15,000 scientists
and with chat GPTGov.
Google has rolled out Gemini 2.0 Flash for free users and in the front end of Gemini as
well.
The U.S. Copyright Office kind of clarified AI-generated content's copyright status.
SoftBank is reportedly eyeing a $40 billion investment in Open AI, even on top of everything Stargate.
Speaking of Stargate partners, our next piece of AI News.
Oracle unveiled some AI agents for supply chain management at its cloud world events.
And last but not least, Open AI did release its new reasoning model 03 mini and 03 mini high to even free users.
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Like I said, we have a big deep seek show coming at you this week.
We're going to be covering the 03 model in more depth.
And we're going to be tackling operator as well, open AI's agentic AI system.
So huge lineup of shows this week.
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