Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

The days of cheap Chinese AI models could be number as government mulls restrictions similar to the US

The AI world’s bargain aisle could be closed by China soon.

Add as a preferred source on Google
DeepSeek AI chatbot running on an iPhone.
Nadeem Sarwar / Digital Trends

DeepSeek’s R1 helped kickstart global interest in low-cost Chinese AI. This was followed by increasingly capable systems from Alibaba, ByteDance, and Z.ai. Some models can be downloaded, customized, and hosted independently, giving many developers an alternative to paying for access to expensive US platforms.

However, this bargain may soon face a geopolitical lock–and this time, it’s because of China and not the US. Reuters reports that Chinese authorities have held meetings with Alibaba, ByteDance, and Z.ai about potentially restricting overseas access to the country’s most advanced AI systems. Discussions apparently included closed models and open-weight releases, along with technology that has yet to reach the public.

The world could lose one of its cheapest AI alternatives

Chinese models have gained ground internationally through a combination of strong performance and aggressive pricing. Z.ai is a great example of this, with its GLM-5.2 leading American systems in capability while costing considerably less. Meanwhile, Alibaba’s Qwen family has become one of China’s most widely used model lineups.

Recommended Videos

So restrictions on future releases could remove an important source of competition. Companies currently using Chinese APIs or planning to self-host open-weight models might have to turn to more expensive alternatives from OpenAI, Google, Anthropic, or other providers.

It is worth noting that this hasn’t been confirmed yet, as Beijing hasn’t settled on this matter yet. Authorities could limit API access, block overseas model-weight downloads, introduce licensing requirements, or reserve selected frontier systems for domestic use. Reuters was unable to determine how any final controls would operate.

Models already downloaded would be difficult to pull back. The greater uncertainty surrounds the next generation of systems that developers currently assume will receive global releases.

China is borrowing from Washington’s playbook

With advanced models being treated more like chips and strategic assets, we can see the shift in how governments are viewing AI. The US recently restricted foreign access to Anthropic’s most advanced Fable and Mythos models over national security concerns. Some of these restrictions on the consumer-focused Fable system were later relaxed after new safeguards arrived, while access to the cybersecurity-oriented Mythos remains limited to selected trusted American organizations.

Chinese officials are reportedly considering tough penalties for leaks or theft of proprietary AI technology. Discussions also covered possible limits on who can finance domestic AI startups, tightening Beijing’s control over both the models and the companies building them.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
A hacker’s arrest just revealed how Microsoft can track your Windows device
Microsoft knew what websites his Windows PC visited.
Windows 11 on a laptop

A teenager allegedly used a VPN to cover his tracks while hacking a US jewelry retailer, but Microsoft knew anyway.

Court documents unsealed in the US case against Peter Stokes, a 19-year-old dual US-Estonian citizen accused of being a member of the notorious Scattered Spider hacking group, reveal that Microsoft provided the FBI with records tied to a tracking mechanism called the Global Device Identifier, or GDID. 

Read more
Microsoft pushed Copilot everywhere, but barely anyone bought it, and even fewer use it: Report
Users are barely showing up for Copilot
Microsoft Copilot Banner Featured

Microsoft has spent the past few years making Copilot extraordinarily difficult to avoid. It appeared in Windows 11, and soon found its way to Edge, Word, and almost everywhere else in Microsoft's software suite. New laptops even received a dedicated Copilot key. Microsoft wanted AI to become a daily habit, and it had hundreds of millions of existing customers to leverage.

But the latest adoption figures suggest that the distribution was quite disappointing. Microsoft revealed that Copilot 365 has more than 20 million paid seats. While that does sound impressive at a glance, this number is dwarfed when you compare the company's more than 450 million paid commercial Microsoft 365 seats. So fewer than 4.5% of those customers pay for the full Copilot experience.

Read more
iFixit wants to fix your appliances next, and it brought a bigger toolkit
iFixit’s new $35 Megalodon wants to save your appliances from the trash
iFixit Megalodon Driver Kit Featured

iFixit built its reputation by showing people how to fix their phones, consoles, and laptops by themselves. But its next target is larger and probably sitting somewhere in your kitchen or laundry room. The company has launched the Megalodon Driver Kit, which is a $34.95 toolkit designed for appliance repairs, furniture assembly, automotive tinkering, and the countless household jobs.

Picture this, your vacuum cleaner may still work perfectly aside from one loose component buried behind a recessed screw. So rather than replace the whole thing, you can make a quick fix with Megalodon.

Read more