A version of this article originally appeared in Quartz’s members-only Weekend Brief newsletter. Quartz members get access to ...
Republican Josh Hawley and Democrat Elizabeth Warren blame Silicon Valley for export-ban loopholes that China’s AI chatbot ...
As China’s DeepSeek threatens to dismantle Silicon Valley’s AI monopoly, the OpenEuroLLM has launched an alternative to ...
While some are saying the development is healthy even if disruptive, others are pressing the panic button. Read more at ...
US tech giant OpenAI on Monday unveiled a ChatGPT tool called “deep research” that can produce detailed reports, as China’s ...
China outmanoeuvred the US with the launch of DeepSeek. But the US’s biggest tech companies are fighting back in the AI race.
The Chinese company’s low-cost, high-performance A.I. model has shocked Silicon Valley, and a longtime China watcher warns that the West is being leapfrogged in many other industries, too.
China has shown the world artificial development can be done on the cheap, opening the door for Australia to catapult itself to the vanguard of a new digital Cold War.
DeepSeek, a disruptive new Chinese AI company, emerged seemingly out of nowhere; the world’s most valuable company lost ...
What especially shook investors was the prospect that China may have closed the tech gap with the United States in AI and especially DeepSeek’s claim that it developed R1 for just $5.6 million—a far ...
China’s DeepSeek is making waves in AI, putting Silicon Valley on the defensive. Could India be next in the AI race? Discover the game-changing developments.
DeepSeek released a chatbot called DeepSeek-R1 on 20 January (a nimbler, cheaper cousin of their 2024 DeepSeek-V3). They claimed it cost them under $6m to train. Given that AI elephants like OpenAI ...