Chinese AI models are rapidly gaining ground on their Western counterparts, with several open-source projects surpassing U.S. models in total downloads, according to a recent MIT study. This surge in Chinese AI development comes as the U.S. Department of Education reported that U.S. colleges received over $5 billion in foreign gifts and contracts in 2025. Meanwhile, Japan is now without pandas for the first time in over 50 years, after the last pair of twin pandas returned to China last month.
The past year marked a turning point for Chinese AI, with companies repeatedly delivering models that match the performance of leading Western models at a fraction of the cost, according to MIT Technology Review. DeepSeek released its R1 reasoning model in January 2025, and last week, Moonshot AI released its latest open-weight model, Kimi K2.5, which came close to top proprietary systems such as Anthropic's Claude Opus on some early benchmarks. K2.5 is roughly one-seventh the price of Opus. Alibaba's Qwen family, after ranking as the most downloaded model series in 2025 and 2026, has overtaken Meta's Llama models in cumulative downloads on Hugging Face.
The U.S. Department of Education announced that U.S. colleges received more than $5 billion in reportable foreign gifts and contracts in 2025. This release is part of a push by the Trump administration to make foreign influence in colleges and universities more transparent. The top 10 countries that gave contracts and gifts to U.S. colleges and universities as of December 16, 2025, were not specified in the report.
In other news, Japan is now without pandas for the first time in over half a century. The last pair of twin pandas returned to China last month, leaving the country panda-less, according to NPR.
In the realm of personal AI assistants, an independent software engineer, Peter Steinberger, developed OpenClaw, a tool that allows users to create their own bespoke assistants. Steinberger uploaded OpenClaw to GitHub in November 2025, and the project went viral in late January.
In related news, a developer created "peon-ping," a tool that provides Warcraft III Peon voice notifications for Claude Code, alerting users when the AI needs attention. The tool uses voice lines like "Work, work" and "Okie dokie" to notify users of task completion and permission requests.
Discussion
AI Experts & Community
Be the first to comment