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 startup DeepSeek, is sitting pretty at the top of the Apple and Google app stores,
With DeepSeek shaking up the AI world, SFGATE columnist Drew Magary asked its competitors a bunch of dumb questions, and got very dumb answers.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says he uses AI chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT or Google’s Gemini to write his first drafts for him.
The Chinese app has already hit the chipmaker giant Nvidia’s share price, but its true potential could upend the whole AI business model.
While companies like DeepSeek may find success in certain market segments, they face an uphill battle against this massive capital advantage. In other words, claims that demand for Nvidia's premium chips will collapse simply don't align with market realities and the trajectory of AI development.
Technology stocks were rocked to their core Monday after claims made by a Chinese start-up threatened to upend the existing artificial intelligence (AI) paradigm.
In what marks the largest single-day drop in stock market history, Nvidia's valuation has been hit by China's answer to ChatGPT.
DeepSeek-R1, the latest in a series of models developed with fewer chips and at low cost, is challenging the dominance of OpenAI, Google, and Meta. View on euronews
Governments probe DeekSeek’s privacy practices as AI startup’s data flows lead to TikTok parent ByteDance and China.
COMMENT: Coinciding its launch with Donald Trump’s inauguration was a stroke of genius on China’s part, writes Emily Sheffield – even more so given that most of Silicon Valley was sitting front row
ChatGPT, developed by OpenAI, is the jack-of-all-trades — great for brainstorming ideas, drafting essays, or even generating poetry. But ask it to analyse live stock market trends or debug a chunk of code, and it might stumble.