Artificial intelligence (AI) is at the  core  of the ongoing technological rivalry between the  United States  and  China . The Trump administration took significant measures to restrict the importation of advanced AI chips designed by  Nvidia ,  AMD , and  Intel . These restrictions aim to  prevent  cutting-edge AI technology from reaching  China , governed by Xi Jinping. Conversely, China is investing heavily in its AI infrastructure, focusing on developing its own advanced  GPUs  and AI models.

The competitive landscape in the AI sector goes beyond just the  US-China  rivalry. Over the past four years, the Chinese government has provided substantial  subsidies , resulting in a surge of companies committed to large AI model development. While the expansive Chinese market offers immense potential, internal conflicts, particularly between  Huawei  and  Alibaba , have surfaced amid this competition.

Huawei Denies Copying Alibaba

Ren Zhengfei, the founder and CEO of  Huawei , made noteworthy comments in early June during an interview with a journalist from the People’s Daily. He admitted that  Huawei’s Ascend GPUs  lag a generation behind  US  chips. This admission raised eyebrows, as it is uncommon for a leading executive to acknowledge their company’s shortcomings publicly.

These statements from Zhengfei come at a crucial moment for Huawei. Just two months prior, the company announced two new AI chips, the  Ascend 910d  and  Ascend 920 , aimed at competing with  Nvidia  for performance supremacy in AI applications, both domestically and internationally. Notably,  Noah Ark Lab , Huawei’s research division, has successfully implemented its first large-scale model entirely on  Ascend chips .

Honestagi has published a study in Github claiming a correlation between  Pangu Pro Moe  and  Qwen 2.5 14b .

For Huawei, developing a  large language model  using its own chips rather than relying on  Nvidia  GPUs is a major achievement. However, the launch of its latest  Pangu Pro Moe model —which utilizes a  Mixture of Experts  configuration—has not been without controversy. A research group,  Honestagi , published a study on GitHub arguing that there is a notable correlation between Huawei’s  Pangu Pro Moe  and Alibaba’s  Qwen 2.5 14b  model. This raises questions about the originality of Huawei’s model.

This correlation suggests that Noah Ark Lab might have trained its AI model using  Qwen 2.5 14b  rather than developing it independently. If true, this could imply a violation of copyright from  Alibaba . Despite the accusations from Honestagi,  Huawei has not publicly denied  these claims. Instead, Huawei emphasizes that  Pangu Pro Moe  does not rely on incremental training from other manufacturers’ models.

Another critical point to consider is that  Huawei  asserts its development team adhered strictly to  open-source licensing  requirements for any third-party code used, although it has not disclosed which open-source models were utilized. Meanwhile,  Alibaba  has yet to respond to this controversy but may offer its perspective in the coming days. The unfolding tension between two of China’s most prominent AI companies presents an intriguing narrative as the industry continues to evolve.

Image | Huawei

More information | Reuters

In Xataka | The Chinese company Alibaba has developed an AI capable of detecting  pancreatic cancer , boasting such accuracy that the US has accelerated its approval process.



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