Xiaomi MiMo Token Plan is Now Globally Available

76 points by mariopt 19 hours ago on hackernews | 57 comments

[OP] mariopt | 19 hours ago

MiMo-V2.5 Series

Input (Cache Hit) Input (Cache Miss) Output mimo-v2.5-pro $0.0036 $0.435 $0.87

mimo-v2.5 $0.0028 $0.14 $0.28

discordance | 15 hours ago

For reference (input cache hit, input cache miss, output):

Deepseek V4 Flash: $0.0028, $0.14, $0.28

Deepseek V4 Pro: $0.145, $1.74, $3.48

GPT 5.5: $0.5, $5, 430

GPT 5.5 Pro: $0.5, $30, $180

Claude Sonnet 4.6: $0.30, $3, $15

Claude 4.7 Opus: $0.5, $5, $25

mynegation | 15 hours ago

GPT 5.5: 430 or $30?
They missed the shift key for the $ sign.

aftbit | 15 hours ago

$ / 1 million tokens

genxy | 19 hours ago

This is because the users are training the product. They need training data, so they sell inference at the price of power.

gruez | 16 hours ago

?

>API Services . If you use the API services, we will collect your IP address and the content (text, audio, video, picture) you submit to analyze the relevant instructions based on the model you select and to generate the returned content. Xiaomi will not use the content you provide for model training or any other purposes.

https://privacy.mi.com/XiaomiMiMoPlatform/en_GB/

colechristensen | 16 hours ago

And what legal recourse do you have if they don't follow those rules?

windexh8er | 15 hours ago

You have no recourse in the US, either. Trust no one is the only path given all of the training data is stolen in the first place.

It will come to light that one or many of the Frontier providers held the data, changed ToS and trained later minimally. But I think they just don't care and will train regardless. None of them abide by any level of ethics that would actually prevent them from leveraging an opportunity.

koteelok | 15 hours ago

Chinese corporation would never lie

Tiberium | 15 hours ago

ChatGPT (the setting is shared with Codex) and Claude (shared with Claude Code) also have sharing enabled by default, so why aren't they cheaper?

koteelok | 15 hours ago

They are? They give away thousands of dollars via subs.

Springtime | 15 hours ago

There's evidence various third-party models (including Deepseek) used distilling in training, based on models from those leading services. So they have more flexibility with pricing.

behnamoh | 15 hours ago

So? And Anthropic/OpenAI literally stole copyrighted content to train their models.

Springtime | 14 hours ago

The point was that distilling based on others' models for training means they're not spending the same amount on R&D and/or training, giving them headroom in other ways (responding to the parent's point). It wasn't a comment reflecting on copyright/fair use.

behnamoh | 14 hours ago

In the same fashion, Anthropic/OpenAI also reduced their training cost by not purchasing the license to copyrighted work and stealing it instead.

malnourish | 15 hours ago

Is that fundamentally any different than what e.g., Meta and OpenAI have done?

Besides, hasn't SCotUS ruled that raw LLM output isn't subject to copyright? So these companies would be breaking a ToS at worst.

camelmel | 15 hours ago

Is this training data even valuable? Usually AI data annotators get paid to write LLM responses, but here all they'd be getting is a bunch of user queries.

VerTiGo_Etrex | 15 hours ago

1. Feed the same queries into Claude 2. Train on the Claude responses 3. ??? 4. Profit

This has been the strategy for months now

sea-gold | 19 hours ago

Other thread (with many more comments): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48282814

faitswulff | 16 hours ago

I wonder how much of DeepSeek and Xiaomi's pricing cuts can be traced back to cheap energy in China.

colechristensen | 16 hours ago

In China the state and corporations can blend so it's difficult to tell the difference between the two. It is known for government sponsored dumping to meet some state goal or another.

faitswulff | 15 hours ago

This runs counter to the last 50 years of American propaganda espousing the inefficiency of government. If the Chinese government can just throw money at industries and have them flourish, why can't other governments?

idiotsecant | 15 hours ago

The Chinese economy is deeply weird from a western perspective. Culture and economics are not orthogonal.

Forgeties79 | 15 hours ago

Highly recommend everyone check out Breakneck. Felt like that gave me my first real insight into the relationship of the government and business in China.

Haven880 | 10 hours ago

It is basically Tang dynasty with tech and CCP members or politburo running the country instead of just 1 emperor. It is deeply ingrain into Chinese culture for 5 millennia. The closest thing is like American arguing about 1st and the love of guns. We are at around LiSiMin CCP peak China. Hopefully there won't be a repeat of Anlushan like incident. America system is really oligarchy cowboys with private cowboys taking turn running the government supported by other cowboys.

adrianN | 15 hours ago

Any government can and does regularly throw money at industries to make them flourish. The American propaganda claims that this is less efficient than letting market forces decide which companies win.

nradov | 15 hours ago

And it turns out that the American propaganda is almost always correct.

foxygen | 15 hours ago

I believe it is more complicated than simply “throwing money at industries”. It seems to me that in China, the Government actually runs the country, while in the US, private capital does.

lazide | 15 hours ago

They made their domestic steel industry ‘flourish’ by getting every peasant to make their own steel mills too, and mostly crashed their economies.

When things line up and the decisions are decent, top down can be really good.

When the decisions are bad, it is exceptionally dramatic failures too. Tofu dregs, etc.

Right now, no one has to liquidate so it’s easy to hide the damage though.

Haven880 | 10 hours ago

You are way behind about China. That was 60s about 60 years ago! Today China is robots. China has way more robots than Japan America and EU all add up together! Their factories run by robots not slaves. You should consider visiting Shenzhen and see for yourself. Or if you are lucky can ask your Chinese friends to register you WeChat and Baidu account and create China version of Rednote XiaoHongShu. That place has uncensored Chinese day to day lifestyle. What you see on America media like YT X FB are heavily censored about China. Things about government is censored. But lifestyle not much. Almost everything in America is censored or fake flooded. You have to be outside of America like in Germany or Indonesia to really see how censored American from what is going on outside of America.

lazide | 2 hours ago

She doth protest too much.

jameson | 15 hours ago

Other governments do, but not as much as China does.

Healthcare in South Korea for example is government managed and it is one of the best healthcare in the world.

I believe utility companies are also government owned.

Also some of the well known companies now were practically government owned during the Park dictatorship in the 70s.

I wouldn't use the term "Flourish" as what you hear and see is strictly controlled

Haven880 | 10 hours ago

Doubt it is best. Taiwan China and Singapore easily better than SKorea. Singapore is more unique where everything is resources tight they still able to create that system.

rapsey | 15 hours ago

As if the west does not use tariffs and subsidies. China is simply much smarter about it and has much more functional institutions.

nonethewiser | 15 hours ago

Not really. Dumping != flourishing

isityettime | 15 hours ago

> If the Chinese government can just throw money at industries and have them flourish, why can't other governments?

One possibility that seems likely to me: it takes longer than a single election cycle for an investment like that to bear fruit. And you have to be willing to admit that some bets the state places will lose. This is harder in the kind of democracy and political climate that the US currently has. China's government has more continuity of leadership and a strong emphasis on stability that seem hard to achieve in the US without a lot more political cohesion and more nuanced opposition than the two-party system currently affords.

If we could achieve it, though, it'd be awesome. Some "best of both worlds" stuff.

nradov | 14 hours ago

Government central planning and industrial policy is always less efficient than free markets. But government can sometimes be more effective in accomplishing critical strategic goals when those are more important than efficiency.

colechristensen | 14 hours ago

The government paying for your output which has nowhere to go is not a flourishing industry.

If my kid starts a lemonade stand and I pay him $500 to dump 20 gallons of lemonade into the sewer, did he run a successful business for a day?

Look into the Chinese ghost cities or US and EU actions against Chinese metals dumping.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underoccupied_developments_in_...

Haven880 | 10 hours ago

Chinese ghost cities you see online already non ghost cities. Ever wonder why ghost cities topic no longer trending on YT and Twitter? You are 10 years behind the propaganda. Now is more of Xinjiang enslavement even though Chinese factories run without lights using robots. But hey narrative is important to keep population control. Ever wonder what happen to XiaoHongShui access in America? It scare the shit out of government and American media just stop highlighting it.

slopinthebag | 14 hours ago

The US government could throw tons of money at everything and get some good results, that doesn't mean it would be efficient. And their system is fundamentally different, I think most westerners would appreciate less efficient AI companies in return for democracy and human rights.

Haven880 | 10 hours ago

Chinese students study like it is Battle Royale Squid Game. Just read up what is Gaokao. And boosted by nearly 1/3 of household income for extra classes. And other study resources. You have that in America but the volume is closer to 500 to 1. This is why before Trump you see American colleges saturated with 20%+ Chinese students. India also the same but the second factor comes in. Proximity. They build universities powerplant factories port airports in cluster. So wastage due to "in between logistics" minimized. And finally everything is way way cheaper in China compare to even cheapest American town. So even if corruption is bad, the underlying structure ensure efficient output multitude higher than peak America. Another country have similar design is Singapore but they lack the talents and resources of China. This can't be replicated in America. American parents don't go nuts spending 30-60% HOUSEHOLD income for education. Most American parents already struggling paying gas and electricity bills. At best they give their children access to TikTok and Snapchat and hint them do sports like Tiger or Beyonce twerking to fame and wealth.

maxdo | 15 hours ago

it's not that huge of a deal if you compare commercial costs in china and cheapest us states, and electricity is only one of the factors.

The real reason: anthropic + openai just cut the reasoning output to prevent distill, and hence you see the rise of chinese models to establish contracts globally .

stingraycharles | 15 hours ago

“and hence you see the rise of chinese models to establish contracts globally”

how will that help them working around the distill issue?

gessha | 15 hours ago

Collecting user data directly by competing on price. The next step would be figuring out how that data can bring them closer to SOTA.

stingraycharles | 14 hours ago

Yes ok but that doesn’t give them the thinking tokens, how to reason about the prompt, which is precisely what’s most important.

onlyrealcuzzo | 15 hours ago

Energy is like 10-20% of the cost of AI.

The rest is mostly hardware depreciation.

stingraycharles | 15 hours ago

So you think they’re running the same types of state of the art Nvidia deployments?

onlyrealcuzzo | 15 hours ago

It's supposed to be even MORE expensive:

Nvidia H100: Typically priced around $25,000–$30,000 (global MSRP).

Huawei Ascend 910C: Reported to cost roughly $28,000, yet it delivers only 60% of the inference performance of the Nvidia H100.

Google's TPUs are significantly cheaper for Google for inference. That's pretty much it.

There's a reason nVidia has an 80% margin right now.

thrownthatway | 15 hours ago

MSRP is irrelevant in this context.

cmiles8 | 15 hours ago

Correct. There are challenges getting enough energy to new data center builds but the cost of the energy is low relative to other costs.

pianopatrick | 15 hours ago

I've heard on podcasts that AI data centers in the US are powered by natural gas. Apparently there is currently a glut of natural gas. So the energy costs are actually pretty low in the US.

esseph | 15 hours ago

We extract more than we can export. Currently sitting on something like at least 3,500 trillion cubic feet of ng. We consume 30-32tcf per year.

dlev_pika | 15 hours ago

Business Model 2026

1. Dump product to corner the market

2. Kill competition

3. Raise prices, enshitify things

4. Profit

onlyrealcuzzo | 15 hours ago

With the latest GRAM architecture just announced, I won't be surprised if there's a model than can run on a MacBook pro M5 that outperforms the best frontier model at implementation in 1 year, and in 2 years, a MacBook Neo.

The frontier models are going to need to REALLY up their game if they can justify $200/mo for pretty awful experiences.

infocollector | 15 hours ago

Does anyone know what cards these guys are running it?

ChrisArchitect | 15 hours ago