DeepSeek’s R1 model has rattled the industry and slashed Nvidia's stock. But for OpenAI, Anthropic and Meta, there is an ironic twist.
Competing with OpenAI’s o1, DeepSeek’s models scored higher on benchmarks and disrupted the AI market, sparking debates on U.S.-China tech dynamics.
OpenAI is at the center of a copyright debacle that could shape the future of content creation and publishing discourse.
OpenAI is focusing on AI infrastructure with Stargate as rivals like China's DeepSeek close the gap on its AI models.
DeepSeek R1’s Monday release has sent shockwaves through the AI community, disrupting assumptions about what’s required to achieve cutting-edge AI performance. This story focuses on exactly how DeepSeek managed this feat,
DeepSeek-R1, launched last week, is 20 to 50 times more affordable to use than OpenAI's o1 model, depending on the task, according to a post on DeepSeek's official WeChat account.
DeepSeek has shook the tech world with its cost-effective open-source models. The AI startup has received praises from all corners of the world including from its competitor OpenAI.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has broken his silence on the Chinese startup DeepSeek that sent shockwaves through Silicon Valley when it released its AI model R1.
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has unveiled its Janus-Pro-7B model, which has outperformed OpenAI's DALL-E 3 and Stability AI's Stable Diffusion in text-to-image generation benchmarks.
Sam Altman welcomed the emergence of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek as a competitor in the AI field. He hinted at upcoming releases from OpenAI to challenge DeepSeek’s R1 reasoning model, emphasizing the importance of more compute for future AI advancements.