Why Chinese Tech Keeps Surprising the West

DeepSeek didn’t come out of nowhere. But it seemed to catch Silicon Valley and global investors by surprise this week, to the tune of billions of dollars in stock market value.

The startup released its latest product on January 20, but it has been around since 2023, and quietly rolled out impressive AI models last year. So why did it seem to catch powerful US tech billionaires entirely off guard?

The DeepSeek shock exposes an uncomfortable truth: American tech exceptionalism, and the xenophobia that underpins it, mean the broligarchy will keep being surprised.

Silicon Valley has no shortage of innovators, or inflated egos. US tech leaders paint themselves as visionaries who can predict future trends decades in advance. Investors reward them handsomely for this, often whether their ideas play out or not. But there’s an insidious, insular mindset baked into American society that leads its tech elite to believe they’re the only ones who can lead the charge.

DeepSeek upended this narrative with a double-whammy: It not only proved AI breakthroughs could happen at a fraction of the cost, but also despite the web of export controls aimed at holding China back. Policymakers have long thought they’re aiding American innovation by enacting these measures, but haven’t always foreseen the unintended consequences this could spur. With DeepSeek, this meant forcing engineers to do more with less. And more broadly, it has spurred Chinese authorities to double down on homegrown chip manufacturing, bringing potential longer-term ramifications.