惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

A
About on SuperTechFans
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
V
Vulnerabilities – Threatpost
C
Cisco Blogs
T
Tenable Blog
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
I
Intezer
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
IT之家
IT之家
博客园 - 司徒正美
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
博客园 - 【当耐特】
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
博客园 - Franky
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
V
Visual Studio Blog
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Latest news
Latest news
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
腾讯CDC
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
A
Arctic Wolf
S
Securelist
雷峰网
雷峰网
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Project Zero
Project Zero
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
F
Fortinet All Blogs
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
S
Schneier on Security
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
Jina AI
Jina AI
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence

VentureBeat

Anthropic says it hit a $30 billion revenue run rate after 'crazy' 80x growth OpenAI voice models get GPT-5-class reasoning Vibe coding exposed 380,000 corporate apps — 5,000 held sensitive data AI agent identity: how to govern agentic AI in 6 stages Anthropic wants to own your agent's memory, evals, and orchestration — and that should make enterprises nervous Enterprise GPU utilization: why 95% of AI infrastructure spend is wasted Governance, not gatekeeping: How SAP brings enterprise‑grade safety to AI connectivity Anthropic introduces "dreaming," a system that lets AI agents learn from their own mistakes RL orchestration: how a 7B model routes tasks across GPT-5, Claude, and Gemini Meet ZAYA1-8B, a super efficient open reasoning model trained on AMD Instinct MI300 GPUs Anthropic Skill scanners passed every check. The malicious code rode in on a test file. Why AI breaks without context — and how to fix it Market research is too slow for the AI era, so Brox built 60,000 identical 'digital twins' of real people you can survey instantly, repeatedly The app store for robots has arrived: Hugging Face launches open-source Reachy Mini App Store with 200+ apps Scaling AI into production is forcing a rethink of enterprise infrastructure Miami startup Subquadratic claims 1,000x AI efficiency gain with SubQ model; researchers demand independent proof. GPT-5.5 Instant shows you what it remembered — just not all of it One command turns any open-source repo into an AI agent backdoor. OpenClaw proved no supply-chain scanner has a detection category for it AI agents are missing all the discussions your team is having. SageOX has an answer: agentic context infrastructure OpenAI turns its sold-out GPT-5.5 party into a monthlong Codex giveaway for 8,000 developers Inside AMEX’s agentic commerce stack: How intent contracts and single-use tokens enforce AI transactions Microsoft takes Agent 365 out of preview as shadow AI becomes an enterprise threat The RAG era is ending for agentic AI — a new compilation-stage knowledge layer is what comes next Salesforce Agentforce Operations fixes workflows breaking enterprise AI MCP command execution flaw: what security teams need to know The scaffolding era is over. LlamaIndex says context is the new moat xAI launches Grok 4.3 at an aggressively low price and a new, fast, powerful voice cloning suite Hidden IT problems are quietly creating risk, shadow IT, and lost productivity Alibaba's HDPO cuts AI agent tool overuse from 98% to 2% One tool call to rule them all? New open source Python tool Runpod Flash eliminates containers for faster AI dev Why OpenAI's 'goblin' problem matters — and how you can release the goblins on your own AI coding agents breached: attackers targeted credentials, not models | VentureBeat Writer launches AI agents that can act without prompts, taking on Amazon, Microsoft and Salesforce Netomi raises $110 million as Accenture and Adobe bet on AI for customer service Cheaper tokens, bigger bills: The new math of AI infrastructure Amazon’s OpenAI gambit signals a new phase in the cloud wars — one where exclusivity no longer applies Enterprise RAG rebuild: hybrid retrieval adoption tripled in Q1 2026 IBM launches Bob with multi-model routing and human checkpoints to turn AI coding into a secure production system AWS Quick's knowledge graph creates an orchestration blind spot Why enterprise GPU utilization is stuck at 5% — and why the fix makes it worse Definity embeds agents inside Spark pipelines to catch failures before they reach agentic AI systems How to build custom reasoning agents with a fraction of the compute American AI startup Poolside launches free, high-performing open model Laguna XS.2 for local agentic coding Mistral AI launches Workflows, a Temporal-powered orchestration engine already running millions of daily executions Microsoft and OpenAI gut their exclusive deal, freeing OpenAI to sell on AWS and Google Cloud Open source Xiaomi MiMo-V2.5 and V2.5-Pro are among the most efficient (and affordable) at agentic 'claw' tasks AI framework autonomously outperforms human-designed R&D baselines Why supply chains are the proving ground for automation‑led iPaaS RAG precision tuning can quietly cut retrieval accuracy by 40%, putting agentic pipelines at risk Enterprises are obsessing over model accuracy while ignoring the infrastructure layer where AI systems actually break. Monitoring LLM behavior: Drift, retries, and refusal patterns CVSS vulnerability triage: 5 failures, 5 fixes 85% of enterprises are running AI agents. Only 5% trust them enough to ship. AI synthetic audiences are already here and poised to upend the consulting industry Mystery solved: Anthropic reveals changes to Claude's harnesses and operating instructions likely caused degradation OpenAI's GPT-5.5 is here, and it's no potato: narrowly beats Anthropic's Claude Mythos Preview on Terminal-Bench 2.0 New startup BAND debuts agentic mesh with deterministic routing to govern multiple enterprise AI agents across model providers, channels OpenAI unveils Workspace Agents, a successor to custom GPTs for enterprises that can plug directly into Slack, Salesforce and more Google and AWS split the AI agent stack between control and execution Are you paying an AI ‘swarm tax’? Why single agents often beat complex systems OpenAI launches Privacy Filter, an open source, on-device data sanitization model that removes personal information from enterprise datasets Google doesn't pay the Nvidia tax. Its new TPUs explain why. Salesforce’s Agentforce Vibes 2.0 targets a hidden failure: context overload in AI agents Google’s Gemini can now run on a single air-gapped server — and vanish when you pull the plug The modern data stack was built for humans asking questions. Google just rebuilt its for agents taking action. Google’s new Deep Research and Deep Research Max agents can search the web and your private data Vercel breach exposes the OAuth gap most security teams cannot detect, scope or contain The AI governance mirage: Why 72% of enterprises don’t have the control and security they think they do OpenAI's ChatGPT Images 2.0 is here and it does multilingual text, full infographics, slides, maps, even manga — seemingly flawlessly Kimi K2.6 runs agents for days — and exposes the limits of enterprise orchestration What AI model should you use for revenue intelligence? Von says all the big ones, and it will automate mixing and matching for you Three AI coding agents leaked secrets through a single prompt injection. One vendor's system card predicted it Train-to-Test scaling explained: How to optimize your end-to-end AI compute budget for inference AI agent security maturity audit: enterprises funded stage one, stage-three threats arrived anyway Anthropic just launched Claude Design, an AI tool that turns prompts into prototypes and challenges Figma Should my enterprise AI agent do that? NanoClaw and Vercel launch easier agentic policy setting, approval dialogs for messaging apps Salesforce launches Headless 360 to turn its entire platform into infrastructure for AI agents Are we getting what we paid for? How to turn AI momentum into measurable value OpenAI debuts GPT-Rosalind, a new limited access model for life sciences, and broader Codex plugin on Github OpenAI drastically updates Codex desktop app to use all other apps on your computer, generate images, preview webpages Anthropic releases Claude Opus 4.7, narrowly retaking lead for most powerful generally available LLM AI lowered the cost of building software. Enterprise governance hasn’t caught up Microsoft patched a Copilot Studio prompt injection. The data exfiltrated anyway Frontier models are failing one in three production attempts — and getting harder to audit Meta researchers introduce 'hyperagents' to unlock self-improving AI for non-coding tasks We tested Anthropic’s redesigned Claude Code desktop app and 'Routines' -- here's what enterprises should know AI's next bottleneck isn't the models — it's whether agents can think together Adobe’s new Firefly AI Assistant wants to run Photoshop, Premiere, Illustrator and more from one prompt Traza raises $2.1 million led by Base10 to automate procurement workflows with AI Agentic coding at enterprise scale demands spec-driven development Designing the agentic AI enterprise for measurable performance Five signs data drift is already undermining your security models Your developers are already running AI locally: Why on-device inference is the CISO’s new blind spot AI agent credentials live in the same box as untrusted code. Two new architectures show where the blast radius actually stops. Intuit compressed months of tax code implementation into hours — and built a workflow any regulated-industry team can adapt OpenAI introduces ChatGPT Pro $100 tier with 5X usage limits for Codex compared to Plus Mythos autonomously exploited vulnerabilities that survived 27 years of human review. Security teams need a new detection playbook Claude, OpenClaw and the new reality: AI agents are here — and so is the chaos Goodbye, Llama? Meta launches new proprietary AI model Muse Spark — first since Superintelligence Labs' formation LLM-referred traffic converts at 30-40% — and most enterprises aren't optimizing for it
DeepSeek-V4 arrives with near state-of-the-art intelligence at fraction of the cost of Opus 4.7, GPT-5.5
carl.franzen · 2026-04-25 · via VentureBeat

The whale has resurfaced.

DeepSeek, the Chinese AI startup offshoot of High-Flyer Capital Management quantitative analysis firm, became a near-overnight sensation globally in January 2025 with the release of its open source R1 model that matched proprietary U.S. giants.

It's been an epoch in AI since then, and while DeepSeek has released several updates to that model and its other V3 series, the international AI and business community has been largely waiting with baited breath for the follow-up to the R1 moment.

Now it's arrived with last night's release of DeepSeek-V4, a 1.6-trillion-parameter Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) model available free under commercially-friendly open source MIT License, which nears — and on some benchmarks, surpasses — the performance of the world’s most advanced closed-source systems at approximately 1/6th the cost over the application programming interface (API).

This release—which DeepSeek AI researcher Deli Chen described on X as a "labor of love" 484 days after the launch of V3—is being hailed as the "second DeepSeek moment".

As Chen noted in his post, "AGI belongs to everyone". It's available now on AI code sharing community Hugging Face and through DeepSeek's API.

Frontier-class AI gets pushed into a lower price band

The most immediate impact of the DeepSeek-V4 launch is economic. The corrected pricing table shows DeepSeek is not pricing its new Pro model at near-zero levels, but it is still pushing high-end model access into a far lower cost tier than the leading U.S. frontier models.

DeepSeek-V4-Pro is priced through its API at $1.74 USD per 1 million input tokens on a cache miss and $3.48 per million output tokens.

DeepSeek V4 API pricing

DeepSeek V4 API pricing chart. Credit: DeepSeek AI

That puts a simple one-million-input, one-million-output comparison at $5.22. With cached input, the input price drops to $0.145 per million tokens, bringing that same blended comparison down to $3.625.

That is dramatically cheaper than the current premium pricing from OpenAI and Anthropic. GPT-5.5 is priced at $5.00 per million input tokens and $30.00 per million output tokens, for a combined $35.00 in the same simple comparison.

Claude Opus 4.7 is priced at $5.00 input and $25.00 output, for a combined $30.00.

Model

Input

Output

Total Cost

Source

Grok 4.1 Fast

$0.20

$0.50

$0.70

xAI

MiniMax M2.7

$0.30

$1.20

$1.50

MiniMax

Gemini 3 Flash

$0.50

$3.00

$3.50

Google

Kimi-K2.5

$0.60

$3.00

$3.60

Moonshot

MiMo-V2-Pro (≤256K)

$1.00

$3.00

$4.00

Xiaomi MiMo

GLM-5

$1.00

$3.20

$4.20

Z.ai

GLM-5-Turbo

$1.20

$4.00

$5.20

Z.ai

DeepSeek-V4-Pro

$1.74

$3.48

$5.22

DeepSeek

GLM-5.1

$1.40

$4.40

$5.80

Z.ai

Claude Haiku 4.5

$1.00

$5.00

$6.00

Anthropic

Qwen3-Max

$1.20

$6.00

$7.20

Alibaba Cloud

Gemini 3 Pro

$2.00

$12.00

$14.00

Google

GPT-5.2

$1.75

$14.00

$15.75

OpenAI

GPT-5.4

$2.50

$15.00

$17.50

OpenAI

Claude Sonnet 4.5

$3.00

$15.00

$18.00

Anthropic

Claude Opus 4.7

$5.00

$25.00

$30.00

Anthropic

GPT-5.5

$5.00

$30.00

$35.00

OpenAI

GPT-5.4 Pro

$30.00

$180.00

$210.00

OpenAI

On standard, cache-miss pricing, DeepSeek-V4-Pro comes in at roughly one-seventh the cost of GPT-5.5 and about one-sixth (1/6th) the cost of Claude Opus 4.7.

With cached input, the gap widens: DeepSeek-V4-Pro costs about one-tenth as much as GPT-5.5 and about one-eighth as much as Claude Opus 4.7.

The more extreme near-zero story belongs to DeepSeek-V4-Flash, not the Pro model. Flash is priced at $0.14 per million input tokens on a cache miss and $0.28 per million output tokens, for a combined $0.42.

With cached input, that drops to $0.308. In that case, DeepSeek’s cheaper model is more than 98% below GPT-5.5 and Claude Opus 4.7 in a simple input-plus-output comparison, or nearly 1/100th the cost — though the performance dips significantly.

DeepSeek is compressing advanced model economics into a much lower band, forcing developers and enterprises to revisit the cost-benefit calculation around premium closed models.

For companies running large inference workloads, that price gap can change what is worth automating. Tasks that look too expensive on GPT-5.5 or Claude Opus 4.7 may become economically viable on DeepSeek-V4-Pro, and even more so on DeepSeek-V4-Flash. The launch does not make intelligence free, but it does make the market harder for premium providers to defend on performance alone.

Benchmarking the frontier: DeepSeek-V4-Pro gets close, but GPT-5.5 and Opus 4.7 still lead on most shared tests

DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max is best understood as a major open-weight leap, not a clean across-the-board defeat of the newest closed frontier systems.

The model’s strongest benchmark claims come from DeepSeek’s own comparison tables, where it is shown against GPT-5.4 xHigh, Claude Opus 4.6 Max and Gemini 3.1 Pro High and bests them on several tests, including Codeforces and Apex Shortlist.

But that is not the same as a head-to-head against OpenAI’s newer GPT-5.5 or Anthropic’s newer Claude Opus 4.7.

Looking only at DeepSeek-V4 versus the latest proprietary models, the picture is more restrained.

On this shared set, GPT-5.5 and Claude Opus 4.7 still lead most categories.

DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max’s best showing is on BrowseComp, the benchmark measuring agentic AI web browsing prowess (especially highly containerized information), where it scores 83.4%, narrowly behind GPT-5.5 at 84.4% and ahead of Claude Opus 4.7 at 79.3%.

On Terminal-Bench 2.0, DeepSeek scores 67.9%, close to Claude Opus 4.7’s 69.4%, but far behind GPT-5.5’s 82.7%.

Benchmark

DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max

GPT-5.5

GPT-5.5 Pro, where shown

Claude Opus 4.7

Best result among these

GPQA Diamond

90.1%

93.6%

94.2%

Claude Opus 4.7

Humanity’s Last Exam, no tools

37.7%

41.4%

43.1%

46.9%

Claude Opus 4.7

Humanity’s Last Exam, with tools

48.2%

52.2%

57.2%

54.7%

GPT-5.5 Pro

Terminal-Bench 2.0

67.9%

82.7%

69.4%

GPT-5.5

SWE-Bench Pro / SWE Pro

55.4%

58.6%

64.3%

Claude Opus 4.7

BrowseComp

83.4%

84.4%

90.1%

79.3%

GPT-5.5 Pro

MCP Atlas / MCPAtlas Public

73.6%

75.3%

79.1%

Claude Opus 4.7

The shared academic-reasoning results favor the closed models: On GPQA Diamond, DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max scores 90.1%, while GPT-5.5 reaches 93.6% and Claude Opus 4.7 reaches 94.2%.

On Humanity’s Last Exam without tools, DeepSeek scores 37.7%, behind GPT-5.5 at 41.4%, GPT-5.5 Pro at 43.1% and Claude Opus 4.7 at 46.9%. With tools enabled, DeepSeek rises to 48.2%, but still trails GPT-5.5 at 52.2%, GPT-5.5 Pro at 57.2% and Claude Opus 4.7 at 54.7%.

The agentic and software-engineering results are more mixed, but they still show DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max trailing GPT-5.5 and Opus 4.7.

On Terminal-Bench 2.0, DeepSeek’s 67.9% is competitive with Claude Opus 4.7’s 69.4%, but GPT-5.5 is much higher at 82.7%.

On SWE-Bench Pro, DeepSeek’s 55.4% trails GPT-5.5 at 58.6% and Claude Opus 4.7 at 64.3%. On MCP Atlas, DeepSeek’s 73.6% is slightly behind GPT-5.5 at 75.3% and Claude Opus 4.7 at 79.1%.

BrowseComp is the standout: DeepSeek’s 83.4% beats Claude Opus 4.7’s 79.3% and nearly matches GPT-5.5’s 84.4%, though GPT-5.5 Pro’s 90.1% remains well ahead.

So ultimately, DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max does not appear to dethrone GPT-5.5 or Claude Opus 4.7 on the benchmarks that can be directly compared across the companies’ published tables. But it gets close enough on several of them — especially BrowseComp, Terminal-Bench 2.0 and MCP Atlas — that its much lower API pricing becomes the headline.

In practical terms, DeepSeek does not need to win every leaderboard row to matter. If it can deliver near-frontier performance on many enterprise-relevant agent and reasoning tasks at roughly one-sixth to one-seventh the standard API cost of GPT-5.5 or Claude Opus 4.7, it still forces a major rethink of the economics of advanced AI deployment.

DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Max is clearly the strongest open-weight model in the field right now, and it is unusually close to frontier closed systems on several practical benchmarks.

While GPT-5.5 and Claude Opus 4.7 still retain the lead in most direct head-to-head comparisons across the company's benchmark charts, DeepSeek V4 Pro gets close while being dramatically cheaper and openly available.

A big jump from DeepSeek V3.2

To understand the magnitude of this release, one must look at the performance gains of the base models. DeepSeek-V4-Pro-Base represents a significant advancement over the previous generation, DeepSeek-V3.2-Base. In World Knowledge, V4-Pro-Base achieved 90.1 on MMLU (5-shot) compared to V3.2’s 87.8, and a massive jump on MMLU-Pro from 65.5 to 73.5.

The improvement in high-level reasoning and verified facts is even more pronounced: on SuperGPQA, V4-Pro-Base reached 53.9 compared to V3.2's 45.0, and on the FACTS Parametric benchmark, it more than doubled its predecessor's performance, jumping from 27.1 to 62.6. Simple-QA verified scores also saw a dramatic rise from 28.3 to 55.2.

The Long Context capabilities have also been refined. On LongBench-V2, V4-Pro-Base scored 51.5, significantly outpacing the 40.2 achieved by V3.2-Base. In Code and Math, V4-Pro-Base reached 76.8 on HumanEval (Pass@1), up from 62.8 on V3.2-Base.

These numbers underscore that DeepSeek has not just optimized for inference cost, but has fundamentally improved the intelligence density of its base architecture. The efficiency story is equally compelling for the Flash variant. DeepSeek-V4-Flash-Base, despite utilizing a substantially smaller number of parameters, outperforms the larger V3.2-Base across wide benchmarks, particularly in long-context scenarios.

A new information 'traffic controller,' Manifold-Constrained Hyper-Connections (mHC)

DeepSeek’s ability to offer these prices and performance figures is rooted in radical architectural innovations detailed in its technical report also released today, "Towards Highly Efficient Million-Token Context Intelligence."

The standout technical achievement of V4 is its native one-million-token context window. Historically, maintaining such a large context required massive memory (the key values or KV cache).

DeepSeek solved this by introducing a Hybrid Attention Architecture that combines Compressed Sparse Attention (CSA) to reduce initial token dimensionality and Heavily Compressed Attention (HCA) to aggressively compress the memory footprint for long-range dependencies.

In practice, the V4-Pro model requires only 10% of the KV cache and 27% of the single-token inference FLOPs compared to its predecessor, the DeepSeek-V3.2, even when operating at a 1M token context.

To stabilize a network of 1.6 trillion parameters, DeepSeek moved beyond traditional residual connections. The company's researchers incorporated Manifold-Constrained Hyper-Connections (mHC) to strengthen signal propagation across layers while preserving the model’s expressivity.

mHC allows an AI to have a much wider flow of information (so it can learn more complex things) without the risk of the model becoming unstable or "breaking" during its training. It’s like giving a city a 10-lane highway but adding a perfect AI traffic controller to ensure no one ever hits the brakes.

This is paired with the Muon optimizer, which allowed the team to achieve faster convergence and greater training stability during the pre-training on more than 32T diverse and high-quality tokens.

This pre-training data was refined to remove hatched auto-generated content, mitigating the risk of model collapse and prioritizing unique academic values. The model’s 1.6T parameters utilize a Mixture-of-Experts (MoE) design where only 49B parameters are activated per token, further driving down compute requirements.

Training the mixture-of-experts (MoE) to work as a whole

DeepSeek-V4 was not simply trained; it was "cultivated" through a unique two-stage paradigm.

  1. First, through Independent Expert Cultivation, domain-specific experts were trained through Supervised Fine-Tuning (SFT) and Reinforcement Learning (RL) using the GRPO (Group Relative Policy Optimization) algorithm. This allowed each expert to master specialized skills like mathematical reasoning or codebase analysis.

  2. Second, Unified Model Consolidation integrated these distinct proficiencies into a single model via on-policy distillation, where the unified model acts as the student learning to optimize reverse KL loss with teacher models. This distillation process ensures that the model preserves the specialized capabilities of each expert while operating as a cohesive whole.

The model’s reasoning capabilities are further segmented into three increasing "effort" modes.

  1. The "Non-think" mode provides fast, intuitive responses for routine tasks.

  2. "Think High" provides conscious logical analysis for complex problem-solving.

  3. Finally, "Think Max" pushes the boundaries of model reasoning, bridging the gap with frontier models on complex reasoning and agentic tasks. This flexibility allows users to match the compute effort to the difficulty of the task, further enhancing cost-efficiency.

Breaking the Nvidia GPU stranglehold with local Chinese Huawei Ascend NPUs

While the model weights are the headline, the software stack released alongside them is arguably more important for the future of "Sovereign AI."

Analyst Rui Ma highlighted a single sentence from the release as the most critical: DeepSeek validated their fine-grained Expert Parallelism (EP) scheme on Huawei Ascend NPUs (neural processing units).

By achieving a 1.50x to 1.73x speedup on non-Nvidia GPU platforms, DeepSeek has provided a blueprint for high-performance AI deployment that is resilient to Western GPU supply chains and export controls.

However, it's important to note that DeepSeek still claims it used officially licensed, legal Nvidia GPUs for DeepSeek V4's training, in addition to the Huawei NPUs.

DeepSeek has also open-sourced the MegaMoE mega-kernel as a component of its DeepGEMM library. This CUDA-based implementation delivers up to a 1.96x speedup for latency-sensitive tasks like RL rollouts and high-speed agent serving.

This move ensures that developers can run these massive models with extreme efficiency on existing hardware, further cementing DeepSeek’s role as the primary driver of open-source AI infrastructure.

The technical report emphasizes that these optimizations are crucial for supporting a standard 1M context across all official services.

Licensing and local deployment

DeepSeek-V4 is released under the MIT License, the most permissive framework in the industry. This allows developers to use, copy, modify, and distribute the weights for commercial purposes without royalties—a stark contrast to the "restricted" open-weight licenses favored by other companies.

For local deployment, DeepSeek recommends setting sampling parameters to temperature = 1.0 and top_p = 1.0. For those utilizing the "Think Max" reasoning mode, the team suggests setting the context window to at least 384K tokens to avoid truncating the model's internal reasoning chains.

The release includes a dedicated encoding folder with Python scripts demonstrating how to encode messages in OpenAI-compatible format and parse the model's output, including reasoning content.

DeepSeek-V4 is also seamlessly integrated with leading AI agents like Claude Code, OpenClaw, and OpenCode. This native integration underscores its role as a bedrock for developer tools, providing an open-source alternative to the proprietary ecosystems of major cloud providers.

Community reactions and what comes next

The community reaction has been one of shock and validation. Hugging Face officially welcomed the "whale" back, stating that the era of cost-effective 1M context length has arrived.

Industry experts noted that the "second DeepSeek moment" has effectively reset the developmental trajectory of the entire field, placing massive pressure on closed-source providers like OpenAI and Anthropic to justify their premiums.

AI evaluation firm Vals AI noted that DeepSeek-V4 is now the "#1 open-weight model on our Vibe Code Benchmark, and it’s not close".

DeepSeek is moving quickly to retire its older architectures. The company announced that the legacy deepseek-chat and deepseek-reasoner endpoints will be fully retired on July 24, 2026. All traffic is currently being rerouted to the V4-Flash architecture, signifying a total transition to the million-token standard.

DeepSeek-V4 is more than just a new model; it is a challenge to the status quo. By proving that architectural innovation can substitute for raw compute-maximalism, DeepSeek has made the highest levels of AI intelligence accessible to the global developer community at a far lower cost — something that could benefit the globe, even at a time when lawmakers and leaders in Washington, D.C. are raising concerns about Chinese labs "distilling" from U.S. proprietary giants to train open source models, and fears of said open source or jailbroken proprietary models being used to create weapons and commit terror.

The truth is, while all of these are potential risks — as they were and have been with prior technologies that broadened information access, like search and the internet itself — the benefits seem far outweigh them, and DeepSeek's quest to keep frontier AI models open is of benefit to the entire planet of potential AI users, especially enterprises looking to adopt the cutting-edge at the lowest possible cost.