All posts tagged: proprietary

Alibaba’s Qwen3.7-Plus supports text, video and imagery inputs at low cost of alt=

Alibaba’s Qwen3.7-Plus supports text, video and imagery inputs at low cost of $0.4/$1.6 per 1M token — but it’s proprietary

Alibaba this week released Qwen3.7-Plus, the latest AI large language model (LLM) in its globally beloved and increasingly expansive Qwen family, boasting more multimodal capabilities and a 60% lower cost than the prior, text-only Qwen3.7-Max model released just weeks ago. However, like its immediate predecessor Qwen3.7-Plus is available only under a “closed” commercial license via proprietary application programming interfaces (API) and Qwen Chat. That marks a big departure from the Qwen strategy to date, which was focused mainly on releasing powerful,near state-of-the-art open source models. Those enterprises and users who relied on the open source Qwen models — among them, U.S. giants such as Airbnb — will no doubt be disappointed to see that Alibaba is going closed for its newer releases. Still, the model is worth a look because of its low cost and high performance on multimodal tasks like creating enterprise-grade visuals or analyzing video, imagery and screenshots, which Qwen3.7-Max cannot do (it’s text-only). It is among the cheaper powerful AI models available now, coming in price-wise just above Chinese rival’s new MiniMax-M3’s …

Alibaba’s proprietary Qwen3.7-Max can run for 35 hours autonomously and supports external harnesses like Anthropic’s Claude Code

Alibaba’s proprietary Qwen3.7-Max can run for 35 hours autonomously and supports external harnesses like Anthropic’s Claude Code

The AI industry has fully entered the “agent era,” a paradigm where AI models do far more than generate text — they now actively plan, execute, and course-correct complex tasks over days rather than seconds. Thus, it’s perhaps unsurprising to see Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba’s famed Qwen Team of AI researchers release a model capable of performing autonomous agentic AI work over multiple days: that model has arrived in the form of Qwen3.7-Max which the company reports in a blog post achieved “~35 hours of continuous autonomous execution” — albeit, in a proprietary, not open source format, as prior Qwen Team releases were. This is also to be expected — it’s what many analysts and industry experts feared in the wake of the departure of several key Qwen Team leaders earlier this year. But it makes sense for Alibaba financially, at least in the short term: training AI models, especially ones as powerful as Qwen3.7-Max, is expensive, and giving them away essentially for free, as open source models are, does not immediately help recoup any …

Goodbye, Llama? Meta launches new proprietary AI model Muse Spark — first since Superintelligence Labs’ formation

Goodbye, Llama? Meta launches new proprietary AI model Muse Spark — first since Superintelligence Labs’ formation

Meta has been one of the most interesting companies of the generative AI era — initially gaining a loyal and huge following of users for the release of its mostly open source Llama family of large language models (LLMs) beginning in early 2023 but coming to screeching halt last year after Llama 4 debuted to mixed reviews and ultimately, admissions of gaming benchmarks. That bumpy rollout of Llama 4 apparently spurred Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg to totally overhaul Meta’s AI operations in the summer of 2025, forming a new internal division, Meta Superintelligence Labs (MSL) which he recruited 29-year-old former Scale AI co-founder and CEO Alexandr Wang to lead as Chief AI Officer. Now, today, Meta is showing us the fruits of that effort: Muse Spark, a new proprietary model that Wang says (posting on rival social network X, used more often by the machine learning community) is “the most powerful model that meta has released,” and has “support for tool-use, visual chain of thought, & multi-agent orchestration.” He also says it will …

New MiniMax M2.7 proprietary AI model is ‘self-evolving’ and can perform 30-50% of reinforcement learning research workflow

New MiniMax M2.7 proprietary AI model is ‘self-evolving’ and can perform 30-50% of reinforcement learning research workflow

In the last few years, Chinese AI startup MiniMax has become one of the most exciting in the crowded global AI marketplace, carving out a reputation for delivering frontier-level large language models (LLMs) with open source licenses and before that, high-quality AI video generation models (Hailuo). The release of MiniMax M2.7 today — a new proprietary LLM designed to perform well powering AI agents and as the backend to third-party harnesses and tools like Claude Code, Kilo Code and OpenClaw — marks yet a new milestone: Rather than relying solely on human-led fine-tuning, MiniMax has leveraged M2.7 to build, monitor, and optimize its own reinforcement learning harnesses. This move toward recursive self-improvement signals a shift in the industry: a future where the models we use are as much the architects of their progress as they are the products of human research. The model is categorized as a reasoning-only text model that delivers intelligence comparable to other leading systems while maintaining significantly higher cost efficiency. However, with M2.7 being proprietary for now, it is a sign …

Mistral AI launches Forge to help companies build proprietary AI models, challenging cloud giants

Mistral AI launches Forge to help companies build proprietary AI models, challenging cloud giants

Mistral AI on Monday launched Forge, an enterprise model training platform that allows organizations to build, customize, and continuously improve AI models using their own proprietary data — a move that positions the French AI lab squarely against the hyperscale cloud providers in one of the most consequential and least understood markets in enterprise technology. The announcement caps a remarkably aggressive week for Mistral, which also released its Mistral Small 4 model, unveiled Leanstral — an open-source code agent for formal verification — and joined the newly formed Nvidia Nemotron Coalition as a co-developer of the coalition’s first open frontier base model. Together, these moves paint the picture of a company that is no longer content to compete on model benchmarks alone and is instead racing to become the infrastructure backbone for organizations that want to own their AI rather than rent it. Forge goes significantly beyond the fine-tuning APIs that Mistral and its competitors have offered for the past year. The platform supports the full model training lifecycle: pre-training on large internal datasets, post-training …