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Chon's avatar

Lovely post - glad you had a productive visit. I think the Chinese labs view the US ecosystem with deep respect / awe, so I'm sure they appreciated your respectful visit.

I think a lot of the cultural differences you described comes from the massive amounts of VC capital that has flooded into the industry. It has really perverted the growth curve.

On the plus side, it's precisely this massive flood of (risk-tolerant) capital which has attracted massive amounts of talent and capex, to enable the awesome build outs across the entire stack.

On the negative side, VC ethos has focused on building monopolies, moats, and really "owning" super intelligence. For VCs and the startups they support, it really is seen as a zero sum game - their closed source model HAS to achieve absolute dominance in order to justify the capital / valuations we are seeing.

Mindful's avatar

Hey Nathan, thanks for sharing a fantastic piece.

As someone currently working at one of the labs you mentioned, I want to offer a few counterpoints.

First, tribalism between Chinese labs is real. It’s probably less dramatic than what we currently see in some US labs, but that doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. I think you may not have seen it simply because people did not want to show it to a visitor.

Second, I want to question the engineering culture you described so positively. I agree that China has an extremely strong engineering culture, and that this helps with execution and fast iteration. But I’m not convinced that this culture alone will help China build a superintelligence.

Building superintelligence is not only an engineering problem. It requires people who are mature enough to take responsibility for intelligence. It requires multidisciplinary thinking across science, society, politics, and morality. In practice, though, these broader perspectives are often overwhelmed by a pure engineering mindset and also by power.

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