The website of the Chinese artificial intelligence company DeepSeek, whose chatbot became the most downloaded app in the ...
Researchers linked the AI chatbot to a Chinese state-owned telecommunications company, which has been banned from operating ...
DeepSeek has gone viral. Chinese AI lab DeepSeek broke into the mainstream consciousness this week after its chatbot app rose ...
The Chinese app has already hit the chipmaker giant Nvidia’s share price, but its true potential could upend the whole AI ...
In terms of daily visits, DeepSeek.com has quickly surpassed other chatbots, such as Google's Gemini and Character.AI, ...
China's new DeepSeek large language model (LLM) has disrupted the US-dominated market, offering a relatively high-performance ...
In DeepSeek’s chatbot app, for example, R1 won’t answer questions about Tiananmen Square or Taiwan’s autonomy. If DeepSeek has a business model, it’s not clear what that model is ...
R1, a chatbot from the startup DeepSeek, is sitting pretty at the top of the Apple and Google app stores, as of this writing. Mobile downloads are outpacing those of OpenAI’s famed ChatGPT ...
DeepSeek is backed by High-Flyer Capital Management, a Chinese quantitative hedge fund that uses AI to inform its trading decisions. AI enthusiast Liang Wenfeng co-founded High-Flyer in 2015 ...
But as the Chinese AI platform DeepSeek rockets to prominence with its new, cheaper R1 reasoning model, its safety protections appear to be far behind those of its established competitors.