Chinese open-source AI models occupy top spots among global developers: ranking



China is home to the world’s top artificial intelligence (AI) models that are open-sourced, according to an American benchmarking platform created by researchers from the University of California, Berkeley.

Kimi K2, MiniMax M1, Qwen 3 and a variant of DeepSeek R1 were ranked as the world’s top open-sourced AI models, beating out offerings like Google’s Gemma 3-72B and Meta’s Llama 4-Maverick, LMArena said in a report on Friday.

The winners were determined by “comparing them side by side and casting votes for the better response”, LMArena said on its website. The platform, previously known as Chatbot Arena, has been used by major AI companies like OpenAI and Google to assess their AI models.

LMArena highlighted the progress of Kimi K2, the top model on the list, which was launched by Chinese AI start-up Moonshot AI on July 11. Moonshot said it open-sourced two versions of Kimi K2.

On its X account on Friday, LMArena said Kimi K2 was “one of the most impressive” open-source large-language models (LLMs) to date, adding that it was gaining popularity because its user responses were “humorous without sounding too robotic”.

DeepSeek R1-0528, a fine-tuned version of the model launched by Hangzhou-based start-up DeepSeek at the beginning of the year, came in second as it was “strong in multi-turn dialogue and reasoning tasks”, the platform said.

  • Related Posts

    What does the new BIA mean for businesses and Indians? – Firstpost

    The India-Israel Bilateral Investment Agreement (BIA) officially came into force on Saturday (July 4, 2026). Signed in New Delhi on September 8 last year, the agreement replaces the nearly 30-year-old…

    Continue reading
    Mukesh Ambani, Sunil Bharti Mittal join global AI body to shape responsible AI – Firstpost

    Reliance Industries Chairman and Managing Director Mukesh Ambani has been named a founding member of the newly launched AI for Good Global Commission, joining an influential group of 44 global…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *