Apple CEO Tim Cook Praises China's DeepSeek

Apple CEO Tim Cook has praised the artificial intelligence models developed by Chinese start-up DeepSeek, as the company moves closer to launching Apple Intelligence on the Chinese mainland pending regulatory approval, the South China Morning Post reports.

tim cook jeff williams china
Speaking at the China Development Forum in Beijing, a state-organized annual event designed to attract global investment, Cook reportedly referred to DeepSeek's AI models as "excellent." He did not elaborate on whether Apple would pursue a partnership with the company. Cook previously commented during Apple's January earnings call that "innovation that drives efficiency is a good thing," in reference to AI companies like DeepSeek, which have been able to deliver impressive performance with lower cost and compute requirements.

DeepSeek has been praised for developing large language models that achieve comparable results to those from U.S. firms such as OpenAI, while requiring significantly fewer resources. The firm claims that its R1 model was developed in just two months with a total cost of $5.6 million.

In February, it was reported that Apple had reached an agreement with Alibaba Group to integrate the Chinese conglomerate's Qwen models into ‌Apple Intelligence‌ for mainland users. The company is also believed to be in talks with Baidu to serve as an additional provider of large language models for the Chinese market.

In addition to his comments on AI, Cook announced plans to expand Apple's cooperation with the China Development Research Foundation, alongside continued investments in clean energy development. Throughout his visit, Cook posted updates on the Chinese social media platform Weibo, showcasing a range of Apple products being used in classrooms, creative environments, and more.

Cook's comments mark a continuation of Apple's intensified focus on the Chinese market at a time when the company is facing declining iPhone shipments and heightened competition from domestic brands. Apple's smartphone shipments in China are believed to have fallen by 25% year-over-year in the fourth quarter of 2024, while annual shipments dropped 17% to 42.9 million units, placing Apple behind local competitors Vivo and Huawei.

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Top Rated Comments

Kottu Avatar
23 weeks ago
"Att Apple, We value user privacy"... then goes to Chinese AI companies.
Score: 23 Votes (Like | Disagree)
senttoschool Avatar
23 weeks ago

"Att Apple, We value user privacy"... then goes to Chinese AI companies.
Um, OpenAI integration on Apple devices uses your inputs to train their AI as well. Only Apple specific LLMs respect your privacy. Any 3rd party integration will not. Chinese or US or European.
Score: 21 Votes (Like | Disagree)
spartan1967 Avatar
23 weeks ago
Is it only me that thinks praising someone/something these days is a business decision than has to do with actual merit?
Score: 19 Votes (Like | Disagree)
senttoschool Avatar
23 weeks ago

I have a hard time believing it's free. I personally don't want to give all my information to the Chinese government.
Chinese government can't prosecute you. But the US government can/might if they get a hold of your data.

PS. Deepseek is open source. Host it locally and the data never leaves your computer. Perfect with an M3 Ultra.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
cocky jeremy Avatar
23 weeks ago

I have a hard time believing it's free. I personally don't want to give all my information to the Chinese government.
Why? You already give it to the US government.
Score: 18 Votes (Like | Disagree)
SW3029 Avatar
23 weeks ago
Anything that takes power away from OpenAI is good by me
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)