Moonshot AI Joins Big Chinese Open Source Wave
By Reuters | 11 Jul, 2025
Hoping to tap into the power of collective community development, China's AI startup Moonshot AI joins other top Chinese AI leaders like DeepSeek, Alibaba, Tencent and Baidu.
A message reading "AI artificial intelligence", a keyboard, and robot hands are seen in this illustration taken January 27, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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.
(Reporting by Liam Mo and Brenda Goh, Editing by Louise Heavens)
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.
Articles
- China Targets Taiwan's Chip Prowess to Avoid 'Containment' Says Taipei
- Nvidia's Buy of Main Supercomputer Software Raises AI Chip Neutrality Concerns
- SpaceX Plans Early June Pre-IPO Roadshow
- OpenAI's Jason Kwon Asks State AGs to Probe Musk's 'Anti-Competitive Behavior’
- Broadcom Scores Long-Term Deal to Develop Custom AI Chips for Google
- Samsung Q1 Profits Surge 8-Fold on AI Demand
- Judge Tana Lin Dismisses Lead-Scare Class Action Against Stanley Tumblers
- Fed Governors See Urgent Inflation Warning Signs
- Trump Continues Uncontrolled Trash Talking
- Zhao Jianhui Latest to Join Ranks of Billionaire Chinese Returnees
