OpenAI accuses Chinese AI firm DeepSeek of stealing its content through "knowledge distillation," sparking concerns over ...
Makers of the Chinese language model claim it was developed for a mere $6 million, far less than OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s ...
The US is struggling to keep its technology within its borders, a goal that the US government and most of the country are determined to achieve to maintain dominance, particularly in AI.
As per a new CNBC report, an email from the U.S. Navy stated that DeepSeek AI should not be used in any capacity due to ...
Earlier this week, almost overnight, the American tech industry entered a full-on panic. The latest version of DeepSeek, an ...
Here's what you need to know this week about artificial intelligence in the Bay Area: China's DeepSeek stirs things up, new ...
After a boost in popularity, it seems DeepSeek might start being banned from app stores across the world due to privacy concerns.
Suspected Chinese spies posing as Taiwanese tourists have been arrested for allegedly taking photographs of Philippine Coast Guard ships, local media reported.
Chinese startup DeepSeek released its open-source R1 AI model this month, trained using 671 billion parameters using just 2,048 Nvidia H800s and $5.6 million – a ...
The US Navy has reportedly sent email to shipmates as it bans the use of DeepSeek's AI citing security and ethical concerns.
With its servers based in China and global scrutiny of Chinese tech firms at an all-time high, people are starting to ask: is DeepSeek just another smooth talker with something to hide?
Microsoft and OpenAI investigate alleged unauthorized data access by DeepSeek-linked individuals while U.S. officials and tech leaders raise concerns about potential IP theft ...