OpenAI CEO Sam Altman downplayed the significance of a new artificial intelligence (AI) model released by Chinese startup DeepSeek on Thursday, saying it did a “couple of nice things” but has been
DeepSeek is making waves with its cost-effective and powerful AI models, with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman praising the Chinese AI startup's AI advancements.
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On Monday, Chinese AI lab DeepSeek released its new R1 model family under an open MIT license, with its largest version containing 671 billion parameters. The company claims the model performs at levels comparable to OpenAI's o1 simulated reasoning (SR) model on several math and coding benchmarks.
Created by the Hangzhou-based startup DeepSeek, the model is being hailed as a competitor to OpenAI’s GPT models, such as ChatGPT o1. DeepSeek claims R1 matches—and in some cases surpasses ...
China-based AI startup DeepSeek has released an open-source version of its reasoning model, DeepSeek-R1, claiming it matches OpenAI's o1 on certain AI benchmarks. Said to challenge OpenAI's ...
Despite impressive benchmarks, the Chinese-made LLM is not without some interesting issues Updated DeepSeek's open source reasoning-capable R1 LLM family boasts impressive benchmark scores – but its erratic responses raise more questions about how these models were trained and what information has been censored.
AI labs might be in panic mode, but enterprises are here to reap the rewards of the effects caused by DeepSeek R1.
Chinese AI lab DeepSeek has released an open version of DeepSeek-R1, its so-called reasoning model, that it claims performs as well as OpenAI's o1 on certain AI benchmarks. R1 is available from ...
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman praised Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s R1 model on Monday, describing it as "impressive." However, he also added that OpenAI will
What I can say is that it's a little rich for OpenAI to suddenly be so very publicly concerned about the sanctity of proprietary data. Collectively, the contributions from copyrighted sources are significant enough that OpenAI has said it would be "impossible" to build its large-language models without them.