Advances from DeepSeek and Alibaba show we can democratize AI with faster models that are cheaper to produce and easier to use.
The arrival of a Chinese upstart has shaken the AI industry, with investors rethinking their positioning in the space.
CFR fellows weigh in on the global reaction to the release of Chinese AI model DeepSeek and what it means for U.S.-China competition.
The Chinese chatbot took the world by storm and rattled stock markets. But lost in all the attention was a focus on how the ...
It could be one of the biggest private computing infrastructure projects in history — or a disaster.
The developer of the chatbox that shocked U.S. incumbents had access to Nvidia chips that its parent company providentially ...
DeepSeek shocked the world with its new AI offering, which it developed for $5 million, contrasting sharply with the billions ...
The cheap, open AI model has sent shockwaves through Silicon Valley. Has Australia already been left behind or does ...
The United States may have kicked off the A.I. arms race, but a Chinese app is now shaking it up. R1, a chatbot from the ...
The sudden emergence of DeepSeek in the global artificial intelligence competition has sparked questions about its impact on ...
After the Chinese startup DeepSeek shook Silicon Valley and Wall Street, efforts have begun to reproduce its cost-efficient ...