
China's Moonshot AI releases open-source model to reclaim market position
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Chinese artificial intelligence startup Moonshot AI released a new open-source AI model on Friday, joining a wave of similar releases from local rivals, as it seeks to reclaim its position in the competitive domestic market.The model, called Kimi K2 , features enhanced coding capabilities and excels at general agent tasks and tool integration, allowing it to break down complex tasks more effectively, the company said in a statement.Moonshot claimed the model outperforms mainstream open-source models in some areas, including DeepSeek's V3, and rival capabilities of leading U.S. models such as those from Anthropic in certain functions such as coding.The release follows a trend among Chinese companies toward open-sourcing AI models, contrasting with many U.S. tech giants like OpenAI and Google that keep their most advanced AI models proprietary. Some American firms, including Meta Platforms, have also released open-source models.Open-sourcing allows developers to showcase their technological capabilities and expand developer communities as well as their global influence, a strategy likely to help China counter U.S. efforts to limit Beijing's tech progress.Other Chinese companies that have released open-source models include DeepSeek, Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu.Founded in 2023 by Tsinghua University graduate Yang Zhilin, Moonshot is among China's prominent AI startups and is backed by internet giants including Alibaba.The company gained prominence in 2024 when users flocked to its platform for its long-text analysis capabilities and AI search functions.However, its standing has declined this year following DeepSeek's release of low-cost models, including the R1 model launched in January that disrupted the global AI industry.Moonshot's Kimi application ranked third in monthly active users last August but dropped to seventh place by June, according to aicpb.com, a Chinese website that tracks AI products.

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India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
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Representatives of the three countries met in China's Kunming on June 19 on the Saarc has been working for years to spread its tentacles in the Indian subcontinent. In Pakistan and Bangladesh, China's arms deals and loans have deeply rooted its influence, aligning their interests with Beijing. Then there is Turkey, which provided military support to Pakistan during its days-long conflict with India during Operation Sindoor, is deepening its defence engagement with Bangladesh, and is seeking favourable real estate for arms the possibility of a China-led nexus, and with Turkey acting as a common denominator between India's western and eastern neighbours, New Delhi could be entering tricky diplomatic first glance, the tensions between India and Bangladesh, and between India and Pakistan, appear to be bilateral disputes. But just scratching the surface reveals China's Pakistan, for instance – a state that is little more than a borrower of loans and purchaser of weapons. Its economy leans heavily on IMF assistance and loans from China, while over 80% of its military hardware comes from World Bank estimates Pakistan's debt repayments to China could stretch over 40 years. And Beijing is all too willing to tighten this leash on Islamabad for its dominance in South was even allegedly also involved in the mini-war between India and Pakistan in May 2025. Indian Army Deputy Chief Lt Gen Rahul R Singh had alleged that Beijing offered active military support to Pakistan during Operation Sindoor – an assertion China observers even described the war as a live testing ground for Chinese has also tried to defame a fighter jet supplier to the other hand, India's eastern neighbour, Bangladesh, is also showing signs of being sucked into China's debt trap, more so after student-led protests dislodged Hasina's government in August 2024. The interim government led by Muhammad Yunus has shown enough signs of its willingness to join the Chinese Hasina's ouster, Bangladesh has been facing growing economic fragility. 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The loans are primarily for Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) projects such as the Padma Bridge, the construction of the Payra Port, and coal-fired power plants. For a developing country whose economy is in tatters, these loans are comes amid the fact that China is the fourth-largest source of foreign loans in Bangladesh, according to a report by the Dhaka-based Prothom March this year, China lent $2.1 billion to Bangladesh. Even before Hasina's ouster, in 2024, Bangladesh had sought a $5 billion soft loan from China to ease pressure on its dollar reserves, but the finalisation remains Reuters reported earlier this year that China would consider Bangladesh's requests to lower interest rates on Chinese loans, and it did. China extended repayment terms from 20 years to 30 years, easing immediate pressure on Bangladesh, reported the Dhaka-based Daily NEXUS HAS A MEMBER FROM WEST ASIAAmid the geopolitical tussle among South Asian neighbours, a West Asian player is stirring the situation deepening engagement with Bangladesh adds a fresh layer to India's July 2025, Haluk Gorgun, the chief of Ankara's defence industries, held talks with Yunus, aiming to establish defence industrial zones in Chittagong and Narayanganj, building on earlier drone exports to military outreach, combined with the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency's humanitarian aid for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh and growing trade engagements, signal a broader alignment in the nexus with Pakistan and Turkey's economic ties with Bangladesh remain modest, its growing footprint on India's eastern borders must be an uncomfortable reality for New without Turkey, the convergence of China, Pakistan and Bangladesh interests would be concerning for India."There is a possible convergence of interests we can talk about between China, Pakistan, and Bangladesh that may have implications for India's stability and security dynamics," CDS General Chauhan said at the ORF event, according to a report in The Indian according to a PTI report, blamed the economic distress in these countries for allowing "outside powers" to leverage their influence, which could "create vulnerabilities for India".India is faced with a new reality in its neighbourhood. While the western front was always a concern, the eastern front has now become a playground for forces that aren't on friendly terms with it.- EndsTune InMust Watch


India Today
an hour ago
- India Today
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Mint
an hour ago
- Mint
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