cross-posted from: https://futurology.today/post/2910566

Alibaba’s Qwen team just released QwQ-32B-Preview, a powerful new open-source AI reasoning model that can reason step-by-step through challenging problems and directly competes with OpenAI’s o1 series across benchmarks.

The details:

QwQ features a 32K context window, outperforming o1-mini and competing with o1-preview on key math and reasoning benchmarks.

The model was tested across several of the most challenging math and programming benchmarks, showing major advances in deep reasoning.

QwQ demonstrates ‘deep introspection,’ talking through problems step-by-step and questioning and examining its own answers to reason to a solution.

The Qwen team noted several issues in the Preview model, including getting stuck in reasoning loops, struggling with common sense, and language mixing.

Why it matters: Between QwQ and DeepSeek, open-source reasoning models are here — and Chinese firms are absolutely cooking with new models that nearly match the current top closed leaders. Has OpenAI’s moat dried up, or does the AI leader have something special up its sleeve before the end of the year?

    • not_amm@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      It works in Spanish, in English it throws an error before answering about Tiananmen as you show 🤫

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        Interesting. I tried Chinese and it also throws an error. Looks like it was a manual thing in only some languages.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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      2 days ago

      I wonder if that’s a UI block like if it’s mentioned then throw error, or if the model itself has a block in there. From this, it looks like it’s baked in and of course they haven’t poisoned it

      • catloaf@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        I’m guessing it’s in the output handler, not the UI exactly. I don’t think you can edit models like that, and the fact that it knows about it at all means they didn’t whitewash the training data set. But my knowledge is limited. In their place, I would probably have included “don’t talk about tiananmen square” in the initialization rules. But failing that, I would have added something in the output processor to check for forbidden knowledge and throw an exception.

        Still, it’s strange that it got the words out before dying.

        • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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          2 days ago

          Yeah agreed, I’m more surprised they didn’t scrub every reference to it on the training set like you said that it’s in the model at all is surprising. I may try to run it myself and see what it does with the same question

  • technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    3 days ago

    These data processing apps are just apps hooked up to big computers with big data. It’s no surprise when rich people buy a bunch of computers and data then run an app on it. It’s much more surprising that people are hyped into believing this is somehow important. “It took one week to copy an app and load the data!!! Wow!!!”

    Nobody cares when “China” writes a decent word processing app or whatever, nor should they.