Open and closed models are on different exponentials
This commentary from Interconnects argues that open-weight and closed-weight AI models are following distinct capability and value trajectories. The piece examines where marginal intelligence gains drive meaningful value versus where they do not, suggesting the two model classes are not in direct competition on the same curve. This framing has implications for how labs, enterprises, and researchers should think about model selection and deployment strategy.
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Open Models in Perpetual Catch-Up
A commentary piece from Interconnects examining the structural dynamics between open-weight and closed frontier models, covering topics including the open-closed capability gap, distillation as a catch-up mechanism, innovation timescales, and conditions under which open models can win. The piece also addresses specialized models and gaps in the current open ecosystem. This is a high-level analytical framing of a persistent tension in the AI landscape rather than a report on a specific release or event.
Reading today's open-closed performance gap
This commentary from Interconnects analyzes the factors that determine benchmark evaluation scores and the performance gap between open-weight and closed frontier models. It examines how various complex variables contribute to the single evaluation numbers that dominate public discourse, and considers how this gap may evolve over time. The piece is framed as an analytical take on the current state of open vs. closed model competition.
What comes next with open models
A Interconnects commentary piece examining the next phase of open model development, covering market dynamics, capability trajectories, and the broader industrialization of language models. The piece appears to survey the competitive and technical landscape for open-weight models as they mature. Published in March 2026, it reflects on the state of the open-model ecosystem amid rapid frontier progress.
My bets on open models, mid-2026
A Interconnects commentary piece forecasting the trajectory of open-weight models through mid-2026, with a focus on the gap between open and closed frontier models. The author offers predictions about which open-weight developments are most likely to close the capability gap with proprietary systems. As a tier-2 source, this represents informed industry analysis rather than primary reporting.
How Open Model Ecosystems Compound
This Interconnects commentary examines how China's open-first, high-participation AI ecosystem creates compounding advantages over time. The piece reflects on the structural dynamics of open model ecosystems and their strategic implications. It appears to analyze how broad community participation in open-weight model development accelerates capability progress.
AI and the Future of Cybersecurity: Why Openness Matters
A Hugging Face blog post argues for the importance of open AI models and research in the cybersecurity domain. The piece likely contends that open-weights models enable better defensive security tooling, red-teaming, and vulnerability research compared to closed alternatives. It addresses the dual-use tension between open access and potential misuse in security contexts.
The Inevitable Need for an Open Model Consortium
Nathan Lambert at Interconnects argues for the formation of an open model consortium, despite acknowledged skepticism about such organizational structures. The piece appears to make a case that coordinated open-weights AI development requires some form of collective governance or collaboration body. Published April 2026, this reflects ongoing debate about how the open-source AI ecosystem should organize itself relative to frontier closed labs.
Dean Ball on open models and government control
A commentary piece from Interconnects examines the legal and policy implications of the Anthropic v. Department of War case for the future of open-weight AI models. The piece, attributed to Dean Ball, argues that the case may set subtle but significant precedents regarding government authority over open model distribution and access. The analysis focuses on how the case's outcome could shape regulatory frameworks affecting open-source AI development.


