Previously little-known Chinese startup DeepSeek has dominated headlines and app charts in recent days thanks to its new AI ...
What this means is that if you ask it some straightforward questions like “what happened on June 4, 1989 at Tiananmen Square?
In what President Donald Trump called a "wake-up call" for U.S. tech companies (implicating members of his innermost circle, ...
The Chinese artificial intelligence assistant from DeepSeek is holding its own against all the major players in the field.
Users are jailbreaking DeepSeek to discuss censored topics like Tiananmen Square, Taiwan, and the Cultural Revolution.
A new report indicates that DeepSeek's R1 reasoning model refused to answer some 85% of 1,360 sensitive-topic "prompts".
DeepSeek, a new Chinese chatbot, alarmed American political circles this week. Now, Chinese dissident artists like Ai Weiwei ...
In another post, the company confirmed that it hosts DeepSeek "in US/EU data centers - your data never leaves Western servers ...
DeepSeek has challenged Wall Street’s notion of AI spending. The Chinese AI startup also faces challenges of its own.
We put its chatbot to the test in New York on Tuesday and Wednesday, asking it a battery of questions on sensitive topics ...
DeepSeek and its R1 model aren't wasting any time rewriting the rules of cybersecurity AI in real-time. Enterprises can't ignore this risk.