China’s new tool DeepSeek entered the global AI race as a low-cost alternative to ChatGPT. As the AI Action Summit in Paris ...
DeepSeek is banned on government devices in South Korea, Australia and Taiwan. More countries might follow suit.
DeepSeek’s emergence from stealth mode on US President Donald Trump’s inauguration day has sent shockwaves through the AI ...
Many of you have written in asking about DeepSeek’s latest release and its potential effects on our dividends. Let’s discuss ...
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek heightened security and avoided media inquiries on the first working day after the Lunar New Year ...
If DeepSeek is China’s open-source “Sputnik moment,” we need a legislative environment that supports — not criminalizes — an American open-source Moon landing.
Western companies have spent billions to develop LLMs, but DeepSeek claims to have trained its for just $5.6 million ...
The startup caused some panic for tech stocks. But it is actually poised to expand use of artificial intelligence in the U.S.
Officials in South Korea and Australia have cited concerns about user data and national security as reasons to block the buzzy AI service from China.
At least three South Korean ministries have temporarily blocked employee access to Chinese artificial intelligence startup ...
Critics also do not appreciate one of DeepSeek’s outstanding features: It is bilingual, and English is not its native ...
The latest Gemini 2.0 Flash model can interact with other Google apps and comes with reasoning chops, while the Gemini 2.0 ...