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The Chinese startup DeepSeek said Thursday that its upgraded artificial-intelligence model can perform mathematics, ...
For investors, DeepSeek's emergence is causing a serious rethink regarding sky-high valuations of U.S. tech firms, especially ...
Mary Meeker predicts AI will spawn numerous trillion-dollar companies, with competition intensifying from firms like China's ...
The debut of R1 turned DeepSeek founder Liang Wenfeng into a tech celebrity and a symbol of China’s ability to compete with the best of Silicon Valley. In February, President Xi Jinping invited Liang ...
The new version of DeepSeek R1 was released under the MIT open source license, so it can be used even in commercial projects ...
But this January, a Chinese startup undercut that narrative. Hangzhou-based DeepSeek—not even a tech company, strictly speaking, but an offshoot of a hedge fund called High-Flyer—released R1 ...
US groups such as OpenAI that are racing to develop artificial intelligence are at risk of being undercut by cheaper rivals ...
Getting such a large injection of funds against an increasingly bifurcated venture capital landscape is no easy feat. The ...
Claims that US export controls have failed, that model export restrictions can curb China’s AI ascent and that Silicon Valley has lost its edge overlook the reality that DeepSeek’s rise was an ...
Jack Clark, a former journalist turned AI policy expert, said DeepSeek ‘might become a closer competitor’ if it had access to more computing resources.