Microsoft warns China is beating the U.S. in AI influence across Africa, Russia and Belarus

Source Cryptopolitan

Microsoft is calling it like it sees it; China is winning the AI race far from Silicon Valley, and it’s doing it with cheap tech and state money, taking control of regions Africa, Russia, Belarus, and many more.

While American firms are still pushing for paid subscriptions and locked ecosystems, Chinese AI tools are spreading fast thanks to open-source models and heavy subsidies.

Brad Smith, president of Microsoft, said DeepSeek’s rapid growth shows how global the fight for AI dominance has become.

“We have to recognize that right now, unlike a year ago, China has an open-source model, and increasingly more than one, that is competitive,” he said. “They benefit from subsidization by the Chinese government. They benefit from subsidies that enable [them] to basically undercut American companies based on price.”

DeepSeek expands into African and sanctioned markets

New data from Microsoft shows DeepSeek’s AI model R1 has taken over in markets where American tech firms have limited reach. The company holds 56% of the AI market in Belarus, 49% in Cuba, and 43% in Russia.

In Africa, it’s the same story. DeepSeek has already captured 18% in Ethiopia and 17% in Zimbabwe, fueled by low costs and no strings attached.

The R1 model launched a year ago and gained traction quickly. According to Microsoft, it helped speed up AI use across the global south by being affordable and easy to access.

That growth has pushed China ahead of the U.S. in global usage of open AI systems, which developers can use, edit, or build on freely. That’s a major difference from how OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic run their tools; those are locked, paid, and built for control.

Smith said poorer countries need help if they’re going to stand a chance.

“If we rely on private capital flows alone, I don’t think that will be sufficient to compete with a competitor that is subsidised to the degree that Chinese companies often are,” said Smith. He called for international development banks and lending institutions to step in and fund data centers and energy costs.

Bright Simons, an AI analyst from Ghana’s IMANI think-tank, said it’s hard to measure DeepSeek’s full impact, but confirmed that Chinese models are now the go-to for many users.

“Africans can’t afford very expensive solutions apart from open source, so you have to go to [Meta’s] Llama or Chinese options,” he said. He also mentioned local tools like Masakhane, built across Africa, and InkubaLM from South Africa.

Microsoft says U.S. tech risks losing AI war without help

The bigger issue, according to Microsoft, is how AI adoption is spreading, and where it’s not. In late 2025, 24% of people in the global north were using AI. That number was just 14% in the global south, with a worldwide average of 16%.

Smith called this a “cause for concern,” warning that if the U.S. doesn’t invest, this divide will grow and so will inequality.

He said the AI divide is now part of the larger battle between the U.S. and China. Microsoft believes the U.S. needs both private investment in training and infrastructure, and public support from governments and banks. “What we do have is, as American companies, a stronger reputation for trust. We have access to better chips than the Chinese companies do… [but] you always have to compete on price,” Smith said.

DeepSeek made waves in Silicon Valley by releasing a strong AI reasoning model that worked well despite needing less compute power. Its next big model is expected to land just before the Lunar New Year.

But Smith also warned that if U.S. tech companies ignore Africa, they’re ignoring the future. “If American tech companies or western governments were to close their eyes to the future in Africa, they would be closing their eyes to the future of the world more broadly, and I think that would be a grave mistake,” he said.

If you're reading this, you’re already ahead. Stay there with our newsletter.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
Ethereum (ETH) Price Closes Above $3,900 — Is a New All-Time High Possible Before 2024 Ends?Once again, the price of Ethereum (ETH) has risen above $3,900. This bounce has hinted at a further price increase for the altcoin before the end of the year.
Author  Beincrypto
Dec 17, 2024
Once again, the price of Ethereum (ETH) has risen above $3,900. This bounce has hinted at a further price increase for the altcoin before the end of the year.
placeholder
Markets in 2026: Will gold, Bitcoin, and the U.S. dollar make history again? — These are how leading institutions thinkAfter a turbulent 2025, what lies ahead for commodities, forex, and cryptocurrency markets in 2026?
Author  Insights
Dec 25, 2025
After a turbulent 2025, what lies ahead for commodities, forex, and cryptocurrency markets in 2026?
placeholder
Top 3 Price Prediction: Bitcoin, Ethereum, Ripple — BTC, ETH and XRP defend key support as rebound scenario stays in playBTC holds above $90,000, ETH hovers near $3,128 at the 50-day EMA, and XRP steadies above $2.07 as traders weigh rebound targets and key downside levels.
Author  Mitrade
Jan 09, Fri
BTC holds above $90,000, ETH hovers near $3,128 at the 50-day EMA, and XRP steadies above $2.07 as traders weigh rebound targets and key downside levels.
placeholder
Solana Future: From high-speed experiment to corporate treasury playbook for the next SOL cycleSolana’s Proof of History architecture is colliding with rising institutional treasury adoption and governance scrutiny, with SOL’s next cycle hinging on validator distribution, stability, and regulated capital access.
Author  Mitrade
Yesterday 07: 40
Solana’s Proof of History architecture is colliding with rising institutional treasury adoption and governance scrutiny, with SOL’s next cycle hinging on validator distribution, stability, and regulated capital access.
placeholder
USD/JPY holds positive ground above 158.00 amid Japan's political concernsThe USD/JPY pair trades in positive territory near 158.10 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The Japanese Yen (JPY) softens against the US Dollar (USD) amid political concerns in Japan.
Author  FXStreet
8 hours ago
The USD/JPY pair trades in positive territory near 158.10 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The Japanese Yen (JPY) softens against the US Dollar (USD) amid political concerns in Japan.
goTop
quote