DeepSeek, a startup AI company owned by a Chinese hedge fund, which is in turn owned by a young AI whiz-kid, Liang Wenfeng, claims that its
R1, the Chinese AI model that disrupted Silicon Valley, available on their cloud platforms, intensifying debates over AI cost efficiency and U.S. tech dominance.
B AI model on its wafer-scale processor, delivering 57x faster speeds than GPU solutions and challenging Nvidia's AI chip dominance with U.S.-based inference processing.
The upstart AI chip company Cerebras has started offering China’s market-shaking DeepSeek on its U.S. servers.
In the wake of the DeepSeek rout of U.S. technology stocks, Republican Senator Josh Hawley wants to stop chipmakers like Nvidia (NVDA) and AMD
A security report shows that DeepSeek R1 can generate more harmful content than other AI models without any jailbreaks.
The firm created the dataset of prompts by seeding questions into a program and by extending it via synthetic data generation. The dataset was published in a Hugging Face listing as well on Google Sheets. Promptfoo stated that it was able to find 1,360 prompts, where most of them contain sensitive topics around China.
DeepSeek R1 is now available on Perplexity to support deep web research. There's a new Pro Search reasoning mode selector, along with OpenAI o1, with transparent chain of thought into model's reasoning. We're increasing the number of daily uses for both free and paid as add more… pic.twitter.com/KIJWpPPJVN
Nvidia called DeepSeek’s R1 model “an excellent AI advancement,” despite the Chinese startup’s emergence causing the chipmaker’s stock price to plunge 17%.
Are DeepSeek V3 and R1 the next big things in AI? How this Chinese open-source chatbot outperformed some big-name AIs in coding tests, despite using vastly less infrastructure than its competitors.
DeepSeek’s success is not based on outperforming its U.S. counterparts, but on delivering similar results at significantly lower costs. The AI price war has begun.