After DeepSeek AI shocked the world and tanked the market, OpenAI says it has evidence that ChatGPT distillation was used to train the model.
After spending years indiscriminately ripping off other people's work and getting sued for copyright infringement left and right, OpenAI is trying to pin blame on Chinese AI startup DeepSeek. As the Financial Times reports,
Barrett Woodside, co-founder of the San Francisco AI hardware company Positron, said he and his colleagues have been abuzz about DeepSeek.
Jose Najarro has positions in Advanced Micro Devices, Marvell Technology, Microsoft, and Nvidia. The Motley Fool has p
Silicon Valley’s initial advantage in LLMs evaporated quickly despite export controls, writes AI expert Gary Marcus.
Oracle looks like a big winner from the new Stargate Project. The tech giant began working more closely with OpenAI last summer. Oracle is outgrowing leaders like Amazon in cloud-infrastructure revenue.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has responded to the market hype of the recently unveiled DeepSeek AI, which caused tech company stocks to plummet.
DeepSeek is the new AI model that's on everybody's lips –here's all the latest news on the ChatGPT competitor.
Chinese AI chatbot DeepSeek has displaced OpenAI’s ChatGPT as the most downloaded app on the Apple App store and the market is panicking. Stocks for major AI connected companies like NVIDIA fell on Monday morning following the news.
Microsoft Corp. and OpenAI are investigating whether data output from OpenAI’s technology was obtained by a group linked to DeepSeek in an unauthorized manner, reported the news agency, Bloomberg.
So, let's consider a few facts for a moment. Reuters reports that DeepSeek's development entailed 2,000 of Nvidia's H800 GPUs and a training budget of just $6 million, while CNBC claims that R1 "outperforms" the best LLMs from the likes of OpenAI and others.