Yazılar

DeepSeek Researcher Voices Pessimism About AI’s Future Impact Despite Company’s Global Success

In its first major public appearance since becoming a global AI sensation, Chinese developer DeepSeek struck a surprisingly cautious tone about the technology’s long-term impact on society.

At the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Chen Deli, a senior researcher at DeepSeek, warned that artificial intelligence could create major social disruptions within the next two decades. “In the next 10–20 years, AI could take over the rest of work humans perform and society could face a massive challenge,” Chen said. “I’m extremely positive about the technology, but I view the impact it could have on society negatively.”

Chen shared the stage with executives from five other Chinese AI companies—Unitree, BrainCo, and others—collectively referred to as the country’s “six little dragons” of AI innovation. While praising AI’s potential in the short term, Chen stressed that companies like DeepSeek must act as “defenders” of social stability as automation accelerates.

DeepSeek rose to global prominence in January after releasing a low-cost open-source AI model that outperformed several leading U.S. systems. The company’s meteoric rise has since made it a symbol of China’s technological resilience amid intensifying competition with the United States.

Despite its success, DeepSeek has remained mostly silent publicly. Its only major appearance this year came when founder and CEO Liang Wenfeng met President Xi Jinping in February. The company has since skipped several major tech events, adding to its enigmatic reputation.

DeepSeek has continued developing its technology quietly, unveiling in September a new V3 model that it described as “experimental,” optimized for efficiency and longer text processing. Its work has also boosted China’s domestic chip ecosystem: hardware makers Cambricon and Huawei now build processors compatible with DeepSeek’s models.

In August, DeepSeek’s announcement of an upgraded model optimized for Chinese-made chips caused local semiconductor stocks to surge—underlining how the company remains both a technical pioneer and a national symbol of self-reliance in AI.

China’s Manus AI Forms Strategic Partnership with Alibaba’s Qwen Team

On Tuesday, Manus AI announced a strategic partnership with the team behind Alibaba’s Qwen AI models, a move aimed at strengthening the artificial intelligence start-up’s goal of deploying the world’s first general AI agent. Unlike traditional chatbots, which respond to user inputs, an AI agent can operate autonomously, executing tasks with minimal human intervention.

Manus AI, which officially launched last week, claimed that its performance surpasses that of OpenAI’s DeepResearch, a popular AI agent. The launch garnered significant attention on Chinese social media, with many comparing Manus AI to DeepSeek, a product by the Hangzhou-based creators of DeepSeek, which surprised Silicon Valley with a cost-effective AI chatbot that rivaled OpenAI’s best.

The partnership with Qwen could create further disruption in the AI industry, which is still reeling from DeepSeek’s emergence. Manus AI, which is part of Beijing Butterfly Effect Technology Ltd Co with offices in Beijing and Wuhan, has been promoting its product by completing various tasks for users for free on the social media platform X. However, the AI agent remains available by invitation only, and the company has admitted that its website is facing technical difficulties due to increased traffic.

The collaboration with Alibaba’s Qwen team is expected to help Manus AI handle the traffic surge and expand its user base. Meanwhile, Alibaba aims to enhance its competitiveness against rivals such as DeepSeek. The two companies plan to integrate Manus AI’s functions with Qwen’s open-source models and AI platforms in China, as announced on Weibo.

A spokesperson for Alibaba confirmed the partnership and expressed enthusiasm about collaborating with more global AI innovators. The Qwen team had previously responded to DeepSeek’s global success by releasing a model they claimed surpassed DeepSeek-V3, further intensifying the competition in the AI space.