Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    TRENDING :
    • The U.S. just unexpectedly lost 92,000 jobs. Here’s how that could affect Fed interest rates, gas prices, and the Iran war
    • Trump claimed Tylenol is linked to autism. Emergency room data just revealed a hard truth about the anti-painkiller crusade
    • We need to rethink our love affair with big vehicles
    • The U.S. job market is still under strain: report shows unemployment rose to 4.4% in February
    • Tech and finance layoffs: Oracle, Block, Morgan Stanley, Capital One headline brutal week for job losses
    • Grocery Outlet is closing stores, joins growing list of retail chains shuttering locations in 2026
    • Eat, drink, and be present: Restaurants and bars are starting to embrace cell phone bans
    • Want to avoid the résumé black hole? Do this
    Compatriot Chronicle
    • Home
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    • Economy
    • Business
    • Headline News
    Compatriot Chronicle
    Home»Business»New AI models are losing their edge almost immediately
    Business

    New AI models are losing their edge almost immediately

    February 18, 20264 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email Copy Link
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    In today’s AI race, breakthroughs are no longer measured in years—or even months—but in weeks.

    The release of Opus 4.6 just over two weeks ago was a major moment for its maker, Anthropic, delivering state-of-the-art performance in a number of fields. But within a week, Chinese competitor Z.ai had released its own Opus-like model, GLM-5. (There’s no suggestion that GLM-5 uses or borrows from Opus in any way.) Many on social media called it a cut-price Opus alternative.

    But Z.ai’s lead didn’t last long, either. Just as Anthropic had been undercut by GLM-5’s release, GLM-5 was quickly downloaded, compressed, and re-released in a version that could run locally without internet access.

    Allegations have flown about the ways AI companies can match, then surpass, the performance of their competitors—particularly how Chinese AI firms can release models rivaling American ones within days or weeks. Google has long complained about the risks of distillation, where companies pepper models with prompts designed to extract internal reasoning patterns and logic by generating massive response datasets, which are then used to train cheaper clone models. One actor allegedly prompted Google’s Gemini AI model more than 100,000 times to try and unlock the secrets of what makes the model work so powerfully.

    “I do think the moat is shrinking,” says Shayne Longpre, a PhD candidate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology whose research focuses on AI policy.

    The shift is happening both in the speed of releases and the nature of the improvements. Longpre argues that the frontier gap between the best closed models and open-weight alternatives is decreasing drastically. “The gap between that and fully open-source or open-weight models is about three to six months,” he explains, pointing to research from the nonprofit research organization Epoch AI tracking model development.

    The reason for that dwindling gap is that much of the progress now arrives after a model ships. Longpre describes companies “doing different reinforcement learning or fine tuning of those systems, or giving them more test time reasoning, or enabling to have longer context windows”—all of which make the adaptation period much shorter, “rather than having to pre-train a new model from scratch,” he says.

    Each of those iterative improvements compounds speed advantages. “They’re pushing things out every one or two weeks with all these variants,” he says. “It’s like patches to regular software.”

    But American AI companies, which tend to pioneer many of these advances, have become increasingly outspoken against the practice. OpenAI has alleged that DeepSeek trained competitive systems by distilling outputs from American models, in a memo to U.S. lawmakers.

    Even when nobody is “stealing” in the strict sense, the open-weight ecosystem is getting faster at replicating techniques that prove effective in frontier models.

    The definition of what “open” means in model licenses is partly to blame, says Thibault Schrepel, an associate professor of law at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam who studies competition in foundation models. “Very often we hear that a system is or is not open source,” he says. “I think it’s very limited as a way to understand what is or what is not open source.”

    It’s important to examine the actual terms of those licenses, Schrepel adds. “If you look carefully at the licenses of all the models, they actually very much limit what you can do with what they call open-source,” he says. Meta’s Llama 3 license, for instance, includes a trigger for very large services but not smaller ones. “If you deploy it to more than 700 million users, then you have to ask for a license,” Schrepel says. That two-tier system can create gray areas where questionable practices can emerge.

    To compensate, the market is likely to diverge, MIT’s Longpre says. On one side will be cheap, increasingly capable self-hosted models for everyday tasks; on the other, premium frontier systems for harder, high-stakes work. “I think the floor is rising,” he adds, predicting “more very affordable, self-hosted, self-hosted, general models of increasingly smaller sizes too.” But he believes users will still “navigate to using OpenAI, Google and Anthropic models” for important, skilled work.

    Preventing distillation entirely may be impossible, Longpre adds. He believes it’s inevitable that whenever a new model is released, competitors will try to extract and replicate its best elements. “I think it’s an unavoidable problem at the end of the day,” he says.



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    The U.S. just unexpectedly lost 92,000 jobs. Here’s how that could affect Fed interest rates, gas prices, and the Iran war

    March 6, 2026

    Trump claimed Tylenol is linked to autism. Emergency room data just revealed a hard truth about the anti-painkiller crusade

    March 6, 2026

    We need to rethink our love affair with big vehicles

    March 6, 2026
    Top News

    These 15 housing markets have the most borrowers underwater

    By Staff WriterMarch 1, 2026

    Want more housing market stories from Lance Lambert’s ResiClub in your inbox? Subscribe to the ResiClub newsletter. Since the Pandemic…

    Mamdani To Reform NYC – Wall Street Moves To Miami

    October 28, 2025

    Black Friday design deals you don’t want to miss

    November 29, 2025

    Trump claims his tariffs have ignited an ‘economic miracle’ for the U.S. Here are the facts

    February 6, 2026
    Top Trending

    The U.S. just unexpectedly lost 92,000 jobs. Here’s how that could affect Fed interest rates, gas prices, and the Iran war

    By Staff WriterMarch 6, 2026

    The latest U.S. jobs report is out and it isn’t pretty. The…

    Trump claimed Tylenol is linked to autism. Emergency room data just revealed a hard truth about the anti-painkiller crusade

    By Staff WriterMarch 6, 2026

    Last September, President Donald Trump took the stage at a White House…

    We need to rethink our love affair with big vehicles

    By Staff WriterMarch 6, 2026

    There aren’t enough hours in the day to be an expert on…

    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    About us

    The Populist Bulletin serves as a beacon for the populist movement, which champions the interests of ordinary citizens over the agendas of the powerful and entrenched elitists. Rooted in the belief that the voices of everyday workers, families, and communities are often drowned out by powerful people and institutions, it delivers straightforward, unfiltered, compelling, relatable stories that resonate with the values of the American public.

    The Populist Bulletin was founded with a fervent commitment to inform, inspire, empower and spark meaningful conversations about the economy, business, politics, inequality, government accountability and overreach, globalization, and the preservation of American cultural heritage.

    The site offers a dynamic mix of investigative journalism, opinion editorials, and viral content that amplify populist sentiments and deliver stories that echo the concerns of everyday Americans while boldly challenging mainstream narratives that serve the privileged few.

    Top Picks

    The U.S. just unexpectedly lost 92,000 jobs. Here’s how that could affect Fed interest rates, gas prices, and the Iran war

    March 6, 2026

    Trump claimed Tylenol is linked to autism. Emergency room data just revealed a hard truth about the anti-painkiller crusade

    March 6, 2026

    We need to rethink our love affair with big vehicles

    March 6, 2026
    Categories
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Headline News
    • Top News
    • US Politics
    • World Politics
    Copyright © 2025 Populist Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.