An AI chatbot backed by the French government has been taken offline shortly after it launched, after providing nonsensical answers to simple mathematical equations and even recommending that one user eat cow’s eggs.
Did the upstart Chinese tech company DeepSeek copy ChatGPT to make the artificial intelligence technology that shook Wall Street this week?
If artificial intelligence can truly run more efficiently, the power it needs might be less than experts assume.
Chinese tech startup DeepSeek’s new artificial intelligence chatbot has sparked discussions about the competition between China and the U.S. in AI development, with many users flocking to test the rival of OpenAI's ChatGPT.
Then, one day in November, many of her questions were answered by Eva, an artificial intelligence-powered chatbot based on a woman in prison she’d never met. Eva, created by El Surtidor, an independent multimedia news outlet in Paraguay,
DeepSeek is the new AI chatbot on everybody’s lips and is currently sitting at the top of Apple’s App Store in the US and the UK. A completely free AI model built by a Chinese start-up, DeepSeek wants to make AI even more accessible to the masses by offering a competitor to OpenAI’s ChatGPT o1 reasoning model without a fee.
Ryan, an AI chatbot, was the star of the Global Labour Market Conference in Riyadh, offering insights on sought-after jobs in Saudi Arabia. Built by Takamol, this advisor addressed queries in multiple languages,
The Chinese startup DeepSeek has sent shockwaves throughout the AI world with the release of its less-resource-intensive AI chatbot, calling into question the amount of power and financial investment needed to develop the technology.
AI chatbots have changed the way we work, think through problems, and discover information. While Apple Intelligence doesn’t offer
Ryan’, a star attraction at a mega-conference in Riyadh, introduces himself as a global labour market advisor, talks about highly sought-after jobs in Saudi Arabia and says politics is not his area of expertise —- except he is not human but a highly intelligent AI-based chatbot.
The startup DeepSeek was founded in 2023 in Hangzhou, China and released its first AI large language model later that year. Its CEO Liang Wenfeng previously co-founded one of China’s top hedge funds, High-Flyer, which focuses on AI-driven quantitative trading.