Forbes March 14, 2025
Erik Jost

AI systems are becoming more self-sufficient than ever, to the point that AI isn’t just talking to people; it’s talking to other AI.

That might sound like a breakthrough in efficiency, with machines handling the mundane so we don’t have to. (They’re much faster and so much more efficient!) But what happens when these AI systems start speaking a language we don’t understand, both literally and figuratively?

This isn’t a purely hypothetical problem; in fact, it raises a real question, one made more pressing by the DeepSeek-R1 release. We’ve already seen AI systems develop their own “language” to communicate more efficiently with one another. Now, due to the training method employed with DeepSeek, we’re learning that the advance of AI...

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