AI startup DeepSeek has once again made access to its core programming interface available after a three-week pause.
After making a meteoric rise at the beginning of this year, DeepSeek has announced that customers can once again top-up credits to use on its API. This comes after the 20-month-old Chinese business hit capacity earlier this month.
Even now, server resources remain limited during the day, according to a DeepSeek representative posting on a verified company group chat on WeChat, as reported by Bloomberg.
Hitting capacity is likely due to the unexpectedly positive reaction – despite some controversies along the way – to the launch of DeepSeek’s chatbot at the beginning of 2025. Developed at just a fraction of the cost of competitors like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, it’s a promise of the possible future of commercial AI.
DeepSeek appears to want to share the momentum, with plans to release key code and data to the public. The goal is seemingly to share more of its core technology and findings than rivals like OpenAI, as one example.
DeepSeek customers should be able to top-up credits from now on, although expect slower services during the day for the time being.
DeepSeek in competition in China and around the worldThe return to regular services came on the same day as Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. launched a preview of its latest model, QwQ-Max. That highlights the ongoing competition between rival Chinese AI businesses, as well as against American-owned companies like OpenAI and other Silicon Valley AI firms.
Alibaba has promised to invest $53 billion over the next three years to bolster its AI infrastructure and capabilities, marking a major refocus for the e-commerce giant. With plans to open-source QwQ-Max from February 25, the competition with DeepSeek is sure to only intensify from here on out.
Featured image: Midjourney
The post DeepSeek reopens access to its interface after three-week suspension appeared first on ReadWrite.