Chinese AI lab DeepSeek provoked the first Silicon Valley freak-out of 2025. Here's what it could mean for American AI policy ...
Sputnik was the name of the first Soviet satellite, which was launched Oct. 4, 1957. It caught the United States by surprise ...
After a boost in popularity, it seems DeepSeek might start being banned from app stores across the world due to privacy concerns.
Companies and government agencies around the world are moving to restrict their employees’ access to the tools recently released by the Chinese artificial-intelligence startup DeepSeek, according to ...
DeepSeek-R1 charts a new path for AI through explaining its own reasoning process. Why does this matter and how will it benefit the world?
The release of DeepSeek’s innovative and efficient artificial intelligence model has been heralded as such a turning point — a “Sputnik moment” for the U.S. Just as the Soviet Union’s 1957 launch of ...
China’s breakthrough is an opportunity for American companies to build more efficient tools. That will also help the U.S. military.
The emergence of DeepSeek came shortly after President Trump unveiled his "Stargate" project to invest $500bn in advancing AI.
Based on my tests and published reports, DeepSeek not yet as advanced as its American counterparts, but it’s quite good ...
Chevron, Engine No. 1, and GE Vernova collaborate on natural gas power plants to meet the surging energy demands of data centers and AI development, while DeepSeek's AI chatbot intensifies US-China ...
Silicon Valley needs to respond to Wall Street about AI when it reports quarterly results, but it doesn’t need to panic.
While Meta surges on AI success despite DeepSeek concerns, Microsoft stumbles on cloud growth. How are these tech giants betting billions on AI's future?