Sam Altman: OpenAI chief’s big statement on DeepSeek, Altman said – no plan to sue Chinese AI company

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New Delhi| OpenAI chief Sam Altman made a big statement on China’s new Deepseek. He said his company has “no plans” to sue DeepSeek.

The US company warned last week that Chinese companies were trying to copy its advanced AI model. “No, we have no plans to sue DeepSeek right now”, Altman told reporters in Tokyo. We’re just going to continue to build great products and lead the world with model capability, and I think that’s going to be fine”

SoftBank and OpenAI announced partnership
On the other hand, Japanese technology giants SoftBank Group and OpenAI took forward their AI partnership to establish a 50-50 percent stake company called SB OpenAI Japan.

SoftBank chief Masayoshi Son and OpenAI chief Sam Altman arrive at an event in Tokyo. They talked about their cooperation and invited Japanese companies to join. Symbolically holding a bright blue crystal ball, Son said his AI service Crystal can be used by companies to plan, market, email and trace old source code.

Crystal will first be rolled out to Son’s own SoftBank Group companies, including semiconductor and software company and electronic payment service Pepe. SoftBank said it plans to spend $3 billion each year to add Crystal to its companies. “This will be super-intelligence for the company”, Son told reporters and other participants at an event on transforming business through AI. I’m so excited”.