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Putting aside the Chinese government’s political and historical censorship affecting DeepSeek AI outcomes, DeepSeek reflects Chinese cultural and business norms and the Chinese economic system.
DeepSeek has upset the top echelons of the AI order, with a dash of Chinese censorship. Experts tell us there is more to the picture than just world filtering.
Chinese startup DeepSeek has been taking the AI industry by storm with a new chatbot rivaling ChatGPT and Gemini that uses a fraction of the power, time, and money to train and operate.
To contextualize DeepSeek’s disruption, let's consider the broader shift in AI being driven by the scarcity of training data.
DeepSeek's updated R1 AI model is more censored than the AI lab's previously releases, one test found — in particular when it comes to criticism of the Chinese government.
DeepSeek has gone viral. Chinese AI lab DeepSeek broke into the mainstream consciousness this week after its chatbot app rose to the top of the Apple ...
It’s impossible to look at the Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek’s new AI model without comparing it against OpenAI, the dominant American rival.
Lex Fridman talked to two AI hardware and LLM experts about Deepseek and the state of AI.
What is DeepSeek? The China-based AI app rivals that of other AI products, though the company says it uses far fewer specialized chips than its competitors.
Chinese startup DeepSeek has debuted an AI app that challenges OpenAI's ChatGPT and other U.S. rivals, sending a shock through Wall Street.
DeepSeek R1, the surprisingly efficient and powerful Chinese AI model, has taken the technology industry by storm and is rattling nerves on Wall Street.
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