The post Google Jumps Back Into the Open Source AI Race With Gemma 4 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Google dropped Gemma 4, a family of open modelsThe post Google Jumps Back Into the Open Source AI Race With Gemma 4 appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Google dropped Gemma 4, a family of open models

Google Jumps Back Into the Open Source AI Race With Gemma 4

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

In brief

  • Google dropped Gemma 4, a family of open models under the Apache 2.0 license.
  • The four-model lineup spans phones to data centers with the 31B model ranking #3 globally already.
  • U.S. open-source AI gets a needed boost, as Gemma 4—backed by DeepMind—positions itself as the strongest American contender against DeepSeek, Qwen, and other Chinese leaders.

Google’s open AI ambitions got a lot more serious today. The company released Gemma 4, a family of four open-weight models built on the same research as Gemini 3, and licensed under Apache 2.0—a significant departure from the more restrictive terms on previous Gemma versions.

Developers have downloaded past Gemma generations over 400 million times, spawning more than 100,000 community variants. This release is the most ambitious one yet.

For the past year, the open-source AI leaderboard has been largely a Chinese affair. DeepSeek, Minimax, GLM and Qwen have dominated the top spots, leaving American alternatives scrambling for relevance. As Decrypt reported last year, Chinese open models went from barely 1.2% of global open-model usage in late 2024 to roughly 30% by the end of 2025, with Alibaba’s Qwen even overtaking Meta’s Llama as the most-used self-hosted model worldwide.

Meta’s Llama used to be the default choice for developers who wanted a capable, locally runnable model. That reputation has eroded—Llama’s Meta-controlled license raised questions about its true open-source status, and its performance slipped behind the Chinese competition. The Allen Institute’s OLMo family tried to fill the gap but failed to gain meaningful traction. OpenAI released its gpt-oss models in August 2025, which gave the ecosystem a breath of fresh air, but they were never designed to be frontier competitors.

And yesterday, a 30-person U.S. startup called Arcee AI released Trinity, a 400 billion parameter open model that made a compelling case that the American scene wasn’t completely dead. Gemma 4 follows that momentum, this time with the full weight of Google DeepMind behind it, turning it into arguably the best American model in the open-source AI scene.

The model is “built from the same world-class research and technology as Gemini 3,” Google said in its announcement. Gemma 4 ships in four sizes: Effective 2B and 4B for phones and edge devices, a 26B Mixture of Experts model focused on speed, and a 31B Dense model optimized for raw quality.

The 31B Dense currently ranks third among all open models on Arena AI’s text leaderboard. The 26B MoE sits sixth. Google claims both outcompete models 20 times their size—a claim that holds up, at least against the Arena AI numbers, where Chinese models still hold the top two spots.

We tested Gemma 4. It’s capable, with some caveats. The model applies reasoning even to tasks that don’t require it, which can make responses feel over-engineered for simple prompts. Creative writing is decent—serviceable, not inspired—and likely improves with more specific guidance and prompt engineering.

Where it delivered most clearly was code. Asked to generate a game, the output wasn’t particularly flashy or elaborate, but it ran without errors on the first try. Not bad for a 41 billion parameter model. That zero-shot reliability is arguably more valuable than a prettier result that needs debugging.

You can try the (basic, yet functional) game here.

The four variants cover the full hardware spectrum. The E2B and E4B models are built for Android phones, Raspberry Pi, and edge devices, running completely offline with near-zero latency, native audio input, and a 128K context window. The 26B and 31B models target workstations and cloud deployments, extending context to 256K and adding native function-calling and structured JSON output for building autonomous agents. All four models process images and video natively. The larger models’ full-precision weights fit on a single 80GB NVIDIA H100 GPU; quantized versions run on consumer hardware.

The Apache 2.0 license is the other headline. Google’s previous Gemma releases used a custom license that created legal ambiguity for commercial products. Apache 2.0 removes that friction entirely—developers can modify, redistribute, and commercialize without worrying about Google changing the terms later. Hugging Face co-founder Clement Delangue praised it, saying that “Local AI is having its moment,” and it is the future of the AI industry. Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis went further, calling Gemma 4 “the best open models in the world for their respective sizes.”

That’s a strong claim. Proprietary systems from Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google’s own Gemini still lead on the hardest benchmarks. But for open-weight models you can run locally, modify freely, and deploy on your own infrastructure? The competition just got significantly thinner. You can try Gemma 4 now in Google AI Studio (31B and 26B) or Google AI Edge Gallery (E2B and E4B). Model weights are also available on Hugging Face, Kaggle, and Ollama.

Daily Debrief Newsletter

Start every day with the top news stories right now, plus original features, a podcast, videos and more.

Source: https://decrypt.co/363178/google-gemma-4-open-source-ai

Market Opportunity
4 Logo
4 Price(4)
$0.012325
$0.012325$0.012325
+1.00%
USD
4 (4) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact [email protected] for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

BDACS, Woori Bank Launch South Korea’s First Won-Backed Stablecoin on Avalanche

BDACS, Woori Bank Launch South Korea’s First Won-Backed Stablecoin on Avalanche

The post BDACS, Woori Bank Launch South Korea’s First Won-Backed Stablecoin on Avalanche appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief Digital asset custodian BDACS has launched KRW1, South Korea’s first fully regulated won-backed stablecoin, through a partnership with Woori Bank. Each token maintains full collateralization with Korean won held in Woori Bank escrow, according to BDACS. The launch comes amid competing parliamentary bills that debate interest payments and capital requirements for stablecoin issuers. Digital asset custodian BDACS has launched KRW1, South Korea’s first fully regulated won-backed stablecoin, in partnership with Woori Bank. The announcement follows completion of a proof of concept validating technical infrastructure spanning fiat deposits, token issuance, and blockchain verification, as per a Thursday press release. Each KRW1 token maintains full collateralization through South Korean won held in escrow at Woori Bank, with real-time banking API integration providing transparent proof of reserves, according to BDACS’ statement. The company trademarked the KRW1 brand in December 2023, building infrastructure before the advent of formal regulations. KRW1 launched on the Avalanche blockchain, chosen for its “high-performance capabilities” and recognition by Korea’s Internet & Security Agency for “reliability in public-sector applications.” “The successful test pilot of KRW1 demonstrates the need for a highly-performant and reliable blockchain tailored for a regulatory-compliant stablecoin,” Justin Kim, Head of Asia at Ava Labs, said in the statement. BDACS envisions KRW1 serving remittances, payments, investments, and deposits, with public-sector deployment planned for low-cost payment and settlement systems in emergency relief disbursements. The company plans to expand KRW1 to additional blockchains and explore collaborations with global stablecoin networks, including potential partnerships with USD-backed issuers Circle and Tether, according to the press release. Stablecoins in Asia South Korean internet giant Kakao is also developing a won-pegged token through its Kaia blockchain, having registered trademarks including “KRWGlobal” and “KRWKaia” in August, Decrypt reported earlier. The launch comes as Korea’s neighbors advance their own stablecoin initiatives, with Japan’s JPYC…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 19:28
Ripple CEO Reacts to BBB Rating for Ripple Prime, Lists Three Points It Validates

Ripple CEO Reacts to BBB Rating for Ripple Prime, Lists Three Points It Validates

The post Ripple CEO Reacts to BBB Rating for Ripple Prime, Lists Three Points It Validates appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Brad Garlinghouse, CEO of Ripple
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/04/03 11:28
US Dollar Index (DXY) Forecast: Critical Double Top Pattern Looms at 100.60 Resistance

US Dollar Index (DXY) Forecast: Critical Double Top Pattern Looms at 100.60 Resistance

BitcoinWorld US Dollar Index (DXY) Forecast: Critical Double Top Pattern Looms at 100.60 Resistance Financial analysts are closely monitoring the US Dollar Index
Share
bitcoinworld2026/04/03 10:35

Trade GOLD, Share 1,000,000 USDT

Trade GOLD, Share 1,000,000 USDTTrade GOLD, Share 1,000,000 USDT

0 fees, up to 1,000x leverage, deep liquidity