Alibaba Unveils Qwen 2.5-Max, Claims It Surpasses DeepSeek

Alibaba has released Qwen 2.5-Max, the latest version of its AI model, claiming it outperforms DeepSeek-V3 and other top AI models, including OpenAI’s GPT-4o and Meta’s Llama-3.1-405B.

The announcement’s timingĀ  – on the first day of the Lunar New Year, when most businesses in China are closed, highlights the urgency of Alibaba’s response to DeepSeek’s rapid rise.

DeepSeek’s advancements have shaken both Silicon Valley and China’s domestic AI market in just three weeks, leading to intense competition among Chinese tech giants.

DeepSeek’s Disruption

DeepSeek made waves with its DeepSeek-V3 model in early January, followed by the R1 model on January 20. These releases stunned the AI industry with their low development costs and high performance. The affordability of DeepSeek’s models has put pressure on AI companies worldwide, forcing them to rethink their spending strategies.

Within China, DeepSeek’s success has sparked a rush among competitors to release upgraded models. ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, launched a new version of its AI model just days after DeepSeek-R1, claiming it outperformed OpenAI’s o1 on benchmark tests.

The AI Price War

DeepSeek’s disruption began last May with the release of DeepSeek-V2, which was open-source and significantly cheaper than existing AI models. At just 1 yuan ($0.14) per million tokens, it triggered a price war among Chinese AI companies. In response, Alibaba slashed prices on its own AI models by up to 97%, with Baidu and Tencent following suit.

DeepSeek operates with a lean team of young graduates and researchers, contrasting with China’s larger tech firms, which have high operational costs and rigid corporate structures. Founder Liang Wenfeng has emphasized that DeepSeek is focused on achieving artificial general intelligence (AGI), not on competing in price wars.

What’s Next?

With Alibaba’s latest release, competition in China’s AI market is only intensifying. The rapid cycle of model upgrades suggests that innovation, rather than scale or pricing power, may determine the future leaders in AI.

While DeepSeek’s breakthroughs have challenged both U.S. and Chinese AI giants, Alibaba’s Qwen 2.5-Max is a clear sign that established tech firms are not backing down. The AI race in China—and globally—is far from over.

Dan Taylor is an award-winning SEO consultant and digital marketing strategist based in the United Kingdom. He currently serves as the Head of Technical SEO at SALT.agency, a UK-based technical SEO specialist firm.