Google is still releasing a lot of llm architecture research. They introduced speculative decoding of LLMs in 2022[1], then released the code to perform sceculative decoding for their Gemma 4 model this year[2]
[1] https://arxiv.org/abs/2211.17192
[2] https://github.com/google-gemma/cookbook/blob/main/docs/mtp/...
Qwen 3.6 shipped with working MTP first, and had working MTP in llama.cpp first.
Ultimately though the real explanation, I think, is Google doesn't care since for their own purposes (in LiteRT-LM), they do bundle them. As far as I know, anyway.
They are more like a single model that has two separate attention head mechanisms.
Revealing optimizations similar to these would pretty much reduce their competitive position.
I suspect their tune will change if they ever take the lead..
Destroying the growth story of overvalued stocks is an interesting investment strategy. It's not even new. Shortsellers understandably get terrible rep from execs, but their actions are more often in the public interest than you'd think. Normally it's exposing fraud, but here we get the really fortunate side benefit of what could eventually amount to the most significant contribution to the general software community since Linux.
Its revealing that they always seem to publish after some big announcement by American AI companies. But regardless, this is one of the benefits of a duopoly.
Chinese AI companies also face a domestic market where open-source distribution is often the only way to reach enterprise clients who won't pay SaaS premiums. The business logic aligns with openness in a way that US labs' VC-funded models don't.
That used to be true, but now they've raised ~7B$, so we'll see how / if that changes.
Chinese companies understand this and they're treating models as shared infrastructure akin to Linux. The money is going to be in customization niches. Companies will charge to tune models for specific use cases and charge support for that. There's also going to be money at the bottom for hardware vendors making chips and memory. But the middle tier of generic LLMs is seeing involution where there's relentless competition driving profits towards the bottom.
Wikipedia is altruistic, and serves humanity quite well.
Contributing to it might not necessarily be. Most open source development is funded by large companies after all and from their perspective it can function as a cost saving measure. Allowing them to focus on their core products and removing the possibility of their rivals from getting a competitive advantage due to having a superior low level stack under their product.
Which is why open source is so successful in areas where software is a cost-center but mostly failed for consumer products (since spending resources on them would actually be altruistic unlike e.g. Linux kernel development)
any altruistic act can be perceived as self serving
Software engineers need money to survive. If they exclusively work on open source stuff where are they getting money from to survive? Follow the money trail… even a donation… eventually it leads to an incentive based source or action.
From open source. You can earn money from open source. Open source is not opposed to capitalism, idk where you got that idea.
I said open source is derivative to capitalism. Meaning open source cannot exist without capitalism. I never said they oppose each other.
Second I said you need to follow the money trail. Money given to people who work on open source comes from non-open source places.
These are orthogonal. One can have a paid job while contributing to open source for entirely altruistic reasons.
> Follow the money trail… even a donation… eventually it leads to an incentive based source or action.
BS. Humans do things for altruistic reasons devoid of individual reward all the time.
I, myself, maintain multiple OSS projects entirely for fun and with the hope that others will find it useful. That's it, that's all. I also donate entirely anonymously to charities simply because I believe others deserve support and dignity.
This form of cold, American libertarianism you espouse is pure poison in the body politic, both in this US and globally. It degrades all of human interaction to transactions. Its no wonder that the US is where sociopaths like Zuck were birthed.
They are absolutely not orthogonal. You missed the point. You cannot ONLY work on open source for altruism. You need money to survive so you need money from a non altruistic source. Otherwise you’re not even able survive. You need to be alive to work on altruism right? So altruism REQUIRES incentive based money to exist BUT incentive based money does NOT require altruism to exist. That is the entire point of what I wrote. That is the intent and meaning behind my post. You didn’t in actuality fully understand that.
> BS. Humans do things for altruistic reasons devoid of individual reward all the time.
I never said they didn’t. Read what I fucking wrote before writing such a vile response. Don’t call BS on something I didn’t say.
I’m saying that a human being needs money to survive. If a human simply did altruistic jobs for no pay all his life he would die. It is a fucking logistical requirement that a human needs to work for pay to get money to buy food to SURVIVE. He needs to be alive to do open source right?
> I, myself, maintain multiple OSS projects entirely for fun and with the hope that others will find it useful. That's it, that's all. I also donate entirely anonymously to charities simply because I believe others deserve support and dignity.
Good for you. And none of this is possible without incentive based non altruistic work funding your leisure time to do this. You need money for food and rent and electricity so you can do your charity work for the world. That’s the only way. What I said is absolutely true and you’ve done nothing to prove otherwise.
> This form of cold, American libertarianism you espouse is pure poison in the body politic, both in this US and globally. It degrades all of human interaction to transactions. Its no wonder that the US is where sociopaths like Zuck were birthed.
Talking like this is not only against the rules here but it is some of the most vile and direct insults I’ve ever fucking read. And it doesn’t even stem from us disagreeing. It stems from you misunderstanding what was said. Why don’t you read over what I wrote and my explanation before making such a stupid comment. Let me be clear. You’re not stupid, but your reply is stupid. And your reply is stupid because of a misunderstanding. So make yourself understand and clean up your act because shit like this does worse damage for the world than psychopaths. More wars are started over misunderstanding and uncalibrated anger than actual psychopathic tendencies.
That I misunderstood your point in context is a different issue, in which case, yup, my mistake.
I suggest you practice a much greater degree of self awareness.
I’d rather speak the truth and what I believe in rather than cater to the feelings of people who cannot face objective reality.
And I didn’t openly or directly insult anyone. I criticize where it’s deserved and where it is true. He personally attacked me and I criticized his attack as appropriately as I could.
If you disagree with my premise, attack my argument. Don’t make it personal by telling me to be self aware and replying to a section of my comment not meant for you.
[†] Another problem with altruism: we don't all agree on whether a goal is altruistic, and what's altruistic in the enactor's eyes might not be in yours. Curating a fountain of human knowledge like Wikipedia? Probably altruistic. Protecting humanity from itself by installing your company as the stewards of frontier LLMs? Not so altruistic in my view.
The War on Drugs had the purpose (not just in its origin but in its perpetuation) of inflicting harm on elite-disfavored subsets of the population that could not be openly targeted for Constitutional reasons, which is about as far from an altruistic reason as it possible to get.
Any individual that provides free labor cannot survive off of said free labor. He must work for money to survive or get donations from someone who earned that money from incentive based labor in order to even buy the food he needs to exist as a living human being. Much of the time that labor is actually closed source.
This is a logistical reality. A lot of open source advocates are unable to get their brains out of the whole mentality that open source literally cannot exist without incentive based software supporting it. Who pays for GitHub to exist? Who pays for the food swes eat? I just code for open source all day and money falls out of the sky.
My smart friend says there are jobs that pay you to work on open source exclusively. Smart guy. In this case you follow the money trail. How does that company get enough money to pay a guy to work exclusively on open source?
Put it another away: if we removed your ability to do incentivized labor and all you can do is charity work… you would run out of money and die from starvation. If we did the opposite and we removed your ability to do charity work… you’d be fine.
All of this re-emphasizes the point of this thread: In our objective reality, the world is driven by incentive based work while altruism is a side effect of surplus wealth generated by incentive based work. That is the fundamental reality.
I don't see an inconsistency. money is pragmatic, the mission needs money
The real mission statement for most companies is to make as much money as possible.
Markets don't run on altruism.
Meanwhile we in the US are blocked from buying Huawei GPUs and retirees are boasting about the nvidia in their portfolios.
US labs in Google, Meta and SpaceX are not leading, none of them managed to build something on par with GLM 5.2.
Care to explain to me why they still don't collaborate and still choose to do it in private?
From a practical POV having all the training data, training infrastructure, and training know-how wouldn't help you either unless you could afford to spend the millions of dollars (hundreds of millions for a SOTA model) in compute to train it each time they released a new training set, in which case you're only talking about the big commercial companies. "open source for the people" just does not apply.
Those are mostly for embedded devices and the current "sponsor" is Apple.
Even if they're ahead they don't have enough GPUs to scale. Open sourcing is hence a good strategy to at least get market share (even if not $).
I say this because we see the same thing used as an argument against China. "If they overtake us, they'll do imperialism (like us)." Again, it says more about us than them.
A better reading (IMHO) Of the situation is that China believes that AI shouldn't be used simply to mint a few more trillionaires but the benefits should be shared with society. Why do I say this? Because we now have 70+ years of China doing exactly that. The transformation in China all the way from rural villages to Tier 1 cities has been utterly astounding. China has lifted ~800M people out of extreme poverty.
In some ways we're at a similar point to the late 1990s and 2000s when Microsoft execs complained that Linux, being free, destroyed intellectual property value. Linux should be a perfect example of how people can and do act altruistically, or at least not in a way to bait-and-switch to enrich themselves.
[1]: https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistory/comments/1d26grm/in_the_...
Meanwhile, Xi Jinping has published his 5th book on how governance in China works and what they're after. These are not books written for a western audience: they're compilations of speeches that he already gave to the Chinese party and state apparatus, so the contents are not sanitized for foreign audiences. But there are no English reviews of summaries of this 5th book at all by the usual China experts that distribute what western audience know about China.
This extends to beyond the government. Even though "for the people but only against the government" is an often-heard mantra, nobody seems to listen to what Chinese AI companies themselves say about why they publish open models. DeepSeek and GLM have said multiple times publicly what their motivations are, yet people on HN still speculate like they usually do.
Truly mind-boggling. I get that a lot of people don't like China. But setting aside the question of whether their dislike is justified, it would at least be rational to properly understand China, even if it's to defeat it. And listening to what China says themselves is absolutely essential for proper understanding. But people don't bother to? And they seem mostly happy with sticking to speculations that match preconceived notions, even if that hurts their chances of defeating China.
For something shorter, you can see Arnaud Bertrand's recent review. https://arnaudbertrand.substack.com/p/the-book-the-west-refu... The review is behind a paywall, but not expensive.
If you want to read policy documents directly (primary source), try the State Council / Chinese government policy database: https://www.gov.cn/zhengce/ and https://sousuo.www.gov.cn/zcwjk/policyDocumentLibrary
They also provide official translations: https://english.www.gov.cn/policies/
For Central Party documents: https://news.cn/politics/zywj/. It lists recent Central Committee / General Office / joint Party-State documents, e.g. 2026 documents on township duty lists, Party member development rules, carbon evaluation, long-term care insurance, and SOE leadership rules.
If you simply take what the Chinese government says at face value, you will be correct way more often than 95% of Western policy wonks, media talking heads, "analysts" and so forth. Because, like you say, they tell you everything they're doing.
In the recent US-China summit, Xi Jinping just came out and used the Thucydides Trap metaphor, which tells you everything about where China thinks it is and where it sees the US going, which is to become increasingly belligerent as their power declines. Now whether or not you agree with that assessment (I do agree), it still tells you China wants to avoid open hostilities, it sees itself as continuing to rise and it fears what a declining US might do.
But western politicians keep raising this metaphor. So at some point they're like "okay we'll speak your language". They then used this metaphor to make the point "our rise isn't the threat, your fear of it is. If you resist it you're walking right into the trap Thucydides warned about". So your conclusion is still right, they don't want open hostilities, a stable world is in their interest.
Then western media ran away with this and were like "OMG Xi mentioned the Thucydides Trap", completely ignoring his point.
1) The CEO himself 2) Tencent 3) CALT (the battery company) 4) NetEase (internet/media company) 5) JD.com (ecommerce) 6) Chinese investment firms
What are they expecting in return? I'd say the same thing that all those investors in OpenAI and Anthropic are expecting - profit.
[0] https://finance.sina.com.cn/stock/vcpe/2026-06-11/doc-iniazi...
https://www.oecd.org/en/data/dashboards/magic-database-indus...
And regarding the dataset:
> Unlike most OECD databases, which rely on government data provided at country-level, the OECD MAGIC database uses firm-level data. The subsidy estimates included in the database are based on raw data obtained from firms’ annual reports, financial statements, bond prospectuses, IPO prospectuses, etc. The data are collected and verified manually by the OECD to maximise accuracy, consistency, and comparability. In some cases, additional information is also obtained from government databases, either to verify the firm-level information or to complement it. Care is taken to avoid double-counting where the data mix corporate and government sources.
Which will likely help them bolster the sales of the MANY new AI chips in development/use in China to international markets. Dislodging Nvidia.
Kinda the opposite of what Jensen Huang (Nvidia) thinks US is doing: https://www.youtube.com/shorts/u3SY8nvjhQA
Edit: I'm a fan of deepseek and believe it's good to make the technology open/available. And do think that also help business - which I support as well.
Edit 2: No idea why I'm getting downvoted. That's also their official stance https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202601/08/content_WS695f1b55...
???
Profit!
Not suggesting this is it, but you know, one possible angle.
Is there anywhere public anymore that isn’t being overrun by lobotomized p-zombies (partisan zombies)? Is it even possible to make such a public space? Ressentiment consumes all discourse.
That's a lot of words to say it's just capitalist greed.
What's with all the China glazing about this stuff? They release some open-source work and people act like they are suddenly the beacon of freedom and transparency.
Hopefully the experts here can offer insight. The above is just my hunch and I’m not a specialist in this field.
So, despite hiring the cream of the crop of math graduates, who could read the papers of free academia, but whose own result the free world could not access - they fell behind.
I have a theory explaining why. I think it's because science is an interactive process. NSA cryptographers could read papers, but they couldn't talk openly with the authors of those papers, because of secrecy demands - even asking question might indicate what they were working on. You can easily imagine them spending months on something they could have avoided by going to the original authors and getting told "Oh, we tried that for a long time, it doesn't work".
Whether that theory is right or not, cryptography is a concrete example of a domain where public research with fewer resources beat private research with a lot more resources.
The American companies, from my impression don’t involve themselves with such lowly “hacks” because they have so much money to just push forward with doing everything on big heavy models that run on the most cutting edge nvidia chips that they can, the moment, kinda sorta get on demand (I say that in some degree of jest).
They don't develop them because they don't collaborate publicly anymore.
Where would the whole industry be if Google never allowed publishing the transformers paper?
It's not a coincidence that the American AI industry grew fastest in capability when it was the most open.
integrating your own work with the latest public advances takes resources. For one or two small changes this is manageable, but the further you diverge from the public, the cost of maintenance rises exponentially if you want to continue to integrate public advances. when you publish your meaningful advance, you offload the maintenance burden onto everyone else (and they only have to pay a linear cost rather than an exponential one) as it's integrated by default in new work.
In most cases, the (exponential) maintenance cost of integrating public advances with secret ones exceeds the value of the public advances, so most that undertake this strategy of advancing the open frontier in secret don't attempt to integrate continually, but instead try to make a breakaway sprint in isolation to grab a few sticky customers before the unstoppable wave of the public frontier catches up.
This is a pattern commonly seen in university research departments when researchers switch into product development mode, most of these projects are a sprint to advance away from the public frontier once a good idea is found and they do good work and find a few customers for a little while. But if you check back in a few years you won't find an advanced research department but a zombie IP company that brings in a steady income via IP enforcement and a small number of customers for whom switching is too expensive.
It's more a cultural thing. Sharing progress is just in their blood.
Multi-head Latent Attention (MLA), Multi-Token prediction, MoE architecture are some of the most famous examples.
MTP is from Meta
Another DeepSeek advance that the west are copying is DeepSeek Sparse Attention (DSA)
[1] R. A. Jacobs, M. I. Jordan, S. J. Nowlan, G. E. Hinton, Adaptive mixtures of local experts. (1991)
[2] M. I. Jordan, R. A. Jacobs, Hierarchical mixtures of experts and the EM algorithm. (1993)
[3] L. Xu, M. Jordan, G. E. Hinton, An alternative model for mixtures of experts. (1994)
[4] S. Waterhouse, D. MacKay, A. Robinson, Bayesian methods for mixtures of experts. (1995)
[5] N. Shazeer, A. Mirhoseini, K. Maziarz, A. Davis, Q. Le, G. Hinton, J. Dean, Outrageously large neural networks: The sparsely-gated mixture-of-experts layer. (2017)
They don't have TPUs or access to the latest Vera Rubin GPUs either to get performance gains for free. All of the optimizations Deepseek have done are in software and it goes down to the PTX assembly level.
Compared to Anthropic who are celebrating in fixing a flickering issue in a terminal app which took months to fix.
DeepSeek are still using NVIDIA (PTX) to train on, but for inference have already transitioned to Huawei Ascend chips, and inference speed is what this paper is addressing.
It's funny, because if you ran Claude Code on a slow terminal, the cause of the flicker was obvious: They kept dumping the entire history of the chat back into the terminal in a number of situations, and relied on the terminal to them end up in the correct state.
More likely is that an AI generated codename is impossible to fix by humans, and SOTA was not able to figure it out until now.
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/24/anthropic-alibaba-distillati...
So many Americans seem to (at least in theory) be ready to sign up for this ongoing confrontation with China. Does anyone think it isn't America who is poking the bear when it comes to the Thucydides trap? Why not try to get along? It occurs to me the only people more Chinese innovation would hurt are the mega cap class in the United States. Elon Musk certainly doesn't want BYD in the United States. Same story all the way down with these super capitalized AI companies. Most average Americans would probably be better off in a world where the United States and China got along. But its those Americans who will be called upon to suffer most of the burden if that trap ever springs.
Why not talk about how China shut out American companies for decades before complaining about BYD?
As an Indian immigrant, the PRC China has engaged in conflict with almost all its neighbors and stated wars in its short history.
China is not so benevolent when they get to the #1 spot:
https://m.economictimes.com/industry/renewables/china-wto-co...
As for the rest of it:
What became clear when DeepSeek came onto the scene was that China was seeking to commoditize LLMs. They consider it an issue of national security not to be beholden to US tech companies when it comes to AI. And I, for one, fully endorse this policy.
Another data point on this is the black market for Claude tokens in China [1]. The chat logs themselves are a commodity to train models.
I believe that OpenAI in particular is a bet on a trillion dollar pot of gold that doesn't exist. Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Meta will all be fine. Anthropic is in a far better position than OpenAI (IMHO) but if DeepSeek or some other Chinese open weight model gets as good at coding, they're in real trouble too.
There is a meteor headed towards all this AI investment that I don't think has been properly accounted for and that is, what happens to all the existing hardware investments when NVidia's next architecture comes out. Blackwell (H100/H200) is the current generation. Rubin (R100, presumably R200) is the next and arrives soon. Now a lot of the investment hasn't been spent yet so will likely be spent on Rubin but at that point, what happens when the next iteration comes out and does 3-4x the compute for the same electricity input and same hardware cost?
Also, what happens when people can run way bigger models on consumer hardware in 5 years? The effective limit for useful local LLMs is currently ~31B parameter models because the RTX 5090 has 32GB of VRAM and Apple's shared memory architecture, which can keep bigger models in memory, just doesn't have the raw processing power.
Anyway, why I argue Anthropic is in a better position (than OpenAI) is that they seem to have captured a market that may well be profitable for them as a company, specifically Claude for coding. So they just haven't burnt quite as much cash as OpenAI so aren't in as deep of a hole.
While I think local models are going to improve maassively over the next few years, running them in a data center at scale is always going to be cheaper for a company. Why? Because they can amortize their costs by running 24/7 and powering them and cooling them is simply cheaper at scale when you're talking about 1000+ engineers who otherwise might only be using their hardware ~40 hours a week.
IMHO Google is in the best position here of all the US companies, even though their models aren't the best, because their data centers are ruthlessly efficient, their homegrown TPUs will eventually catch up (and thus avoid the NVidia tax) and they simply haven't bet the farm on winning AI.
However, Google probably won't catch up. Nvidia has been winning in spite of the fact that their hardware is general purpose rather than tuned for inference.
Rubin has architectural differences I don't understand that are supposed to make inference much cheaper and faster while still retaining those other more generic capabilities. Their next generation after that is going to do even better at being fast for inference and general purpose.
Google is betting that their TPUs won't depreciate faster than the markup they have to pay to Nvidia. I don't think they will be right.
A100s are ~7 years old and going for more than 2 dollars an hour, significantly more expensive than even 2 years ago. This is because anything with 80gb of VRAM or more and made by Nvidia will have economically useful lifespans of like, 10 years.
I could see H100s getting 12 years.
Micheal Berry doesn't know shit about GPUs.
Now jump ahead 2 years and you seem to have a massive jump in performance [1]. The tokens/Watt goes up by at least 2 orders of magnitude. And the B100 is 3-4x that. And we're about to hit the R100 (Rubin) cliff.
That's what this is going to come down. When hyperscalar DCs are getting to Gigawatt power usage, it all comes down to power efficiency. Those A100s aren't far from being sold for scrap.
I've been looking into how different companies are handling depreciation for this. Amazon seems to be saying the life is 3-4 years, Google 4-5 and Meta is saying 8+, which I think is wildly optimistic.
[1]: https://lambda.ai/inference-models/deepseek-ai/deepseek-v4-f...
anyone with IQ higher than 130 (thus qualified for actual AI R&D) would be questioning something obvious here -
if they are already doing such dodgy stuff with the aim to maximize profits, why would those resellers have large amount of logs with actual American model responses to sell to those AI labs in the first place. shouldn't they just post train & customize some leading Chinese open source models to pretend to be Opus or GPT for the vast majority of their users (as classified by some models) who don't know much about expected Opus behaviours & not skilled enough to tell the differences?
that is actually the interesting bit not covered in your censored version of the story line, it is also what happens on the ground. your censored version of the story implies that those dodgy resellers using stolen credit cards, pooling accounts with stolen IDs and illegally selling very personal logs would somehow be honest enough to spend extra $ to ensure their victims (aka paying users) can actually use real Opus and GPT. LOL
dude, you failed this IQ test miserably.
We in the United States will never forget!
For all the harm Trump does to the US at least he is helping China!
https://yipzap.com/anthropic-accuses-alibaba-of-largest-ai-d...
Don't even try to combine it with any notion of "leadership" then, however, since distillation is literally "copying the actual leader"
(and if you argue the US models do produce copyrighted works, then oooops - whose copyright is it huh?)
There's no "leader" if, absent someone whose results you're copying, you are an emperor without clothes
And certainly they have no idea whether these outputs (assuming they ever existed and it wasn't made up) were used for training. The article mentions that DS made 150k requests. This isn't much and might have been just an eval or a benchmark to compare their own model against. It's really hard to believe DeepSeek had any Claude outputs anywhere in their training schedule, since it's just too different. Besides training on random vibecode of course, which is mostly written by Claude.
Imagine if your casio calculator would come with a ToS that says you can't use it to develop a competitor calculator or any other tools. Or that your hammer can't be used to make other tools. Or, closer to the HN crowd, imagine MS in the 90s saying that you can't use their OS to build competing services to MS. They'd be laughed at and be split immediately if they tried that.
The only thing they can do is to refuse serving tokens (and even that's debatable, if we get to tokens being commoditised). But that's gonna be a game of whack-a-mole, and they know it.