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DeepSeek Is a Wake-Up Call. Is America Listening?
Illustration by The Free Press
The Chinese start-up has blown up our assumptions about American tech supremacy—and made the AI race very real.
By Geoffrey Cain
01.28.25 — Tech and Business
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On Monday, Nvidia’s stock price fell by 17 percent. The firm, whose chips have powered America’s AI revolution, lost nearly $600 billion in market capitalization—the largest single-day sell-off in history. Other tech stocks plummeted too, with more than $1 trillion wiped off U.S. stock markets.

Why? Because DeepSeek, a small Chinese start-up almost no one had heard of until last week, announced that it had built high-performing AI models at a fraction of what America’s tech giants spend on theirs. The firm claims that it took just $6 million and two months to build its reasoning model, DeepSeek-R1. It works at least as well as its American rivals’ models, which required billions of dollars’ worth of state-of-the-art chips, and DeepSeek’s software has jumped to the top of the app store sales charts, leapfrogging OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

By delivering high-performance capabilities without demanding the staggering computational resources of Western AI models, DeepSeek brings cutting-edge AI within reach of anyone with modest resources. In doing so, it has blown up our assumptions about American supremacy in the AI race—and could herald a period of dangerous instability.

While DeepSeek’s low-cost breakthrough has upended the AI world, the disruption is more profound than that.

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Geoffrey Cain
I write about reinvention, failure, and comeback in tech and business. Author of Steve Jobs in Exile (Penguin Portfolio, May 19, 2026), The Perfect Police State, and Samsung Rising. Bylines in The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, Time, and Wired.
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