Chinese start-up DeepSeek created a cost-efficient and powerful artificial intelligence model that appears to rival U.S. programs.
After DeepSeek AI shocked the world and tanked the market, OpenAI says it has evidence that ChatGPT distillation was used to train the model.
DeepSeek AI, favored by investors over ChatGPT, uses rapid advancements with cheaper chips as U.S. tech restrictions fuel China’s AI innovation.
DeepSeek, a Chinese AI start-up, has taken the tech world by storm. Its app, powered by the company's new reasoning model, R1, has quickly captured the attention of users and industry experts alike. Within days of its release, the app topped Apple's top free apps chart in China, showcasing the immense interest.
The buzz around Chinese AI startup DeepSeek began picking up steam earlier this month, when the startup released R1, its model that rivals OpenAI’s o1.
The controversy arises as OpenAI claims DeepSeek plagiarized its plagiarism machine by allegedly using ChatGPT outputs for training. OpenAI has accused Chinese AI startup DeepSeek of using a technique called “distillation” to train its own large language model (LLM) using outputs from ChatGPT.
Chinese AI company DeepSeek released an open-source LLM called DeepSeek R1, becoming the buzziest AI chatbot since ChatGPT. It's purportedly just as good — if not better — than OpenAI's models, cheaper to use,
Chinese startup DeepSeek has debuted an AI app that challenges OpenAI's ChatGPT and other U.S. rivals, sending a shock through Wall Street.
Earlier this week, almost overnight, the American tech industry entered a full-on panic. The latest version of DeepSeek, an AI model from a Chinese start-up of the same name, appeared to equal OpenAI’s most advanced program, o1. On Monday, DeepSeek overtook ChatGPT as the No. 1 free app on Apple’s mobile-app store in the United States.
A Chinese artificial intelligence startup's rapid ascent in the AI space has sparked both security concerns and market ripples. DeepSeek, which recently surpassed OpenAI's ChatGPT on Apple Inc.'s App Store,
Chinese AI company DeepSeek has huge success on the Apple App Store: its AI assistant app is the top free app, beating OpenAI's ChatGPT app.