Top of the line GPUs. DeepSeek has said it has access to 10,000 of Nvidia’s older generation A100 GPUs—chips that were obtained before the U.S. imposed export controls that re
Will DeepSeek get the TikTok treatment? The Chinese AI sensation is facing intense scrutiny—and was hit with a cyberattack Monday.
DeepSeek R1, the surprisingly efficient and powerful Chinese AI model, has taken the technology industry by storm and is rattling nerves on Wall Street.
Unlike some chatbot rivals, the fact that DeepSeek is open source provides it with some level of protection. This means that anyone can run it on their computer and developers can tap into the API in a way that would be hard to restrict. But the DeepSeek app is still at risk.
On Thursday, OpenAI released a research preview of " Operator ," a web automation tool that uses a new AI model called Computer-Using Agent (CUA) to control a web browser through a visual interface. The system performs tasks by viewing and interacting with on-screen elements like buttons and text fields similar to how a human would.
Amid ongoing fears over TikTok, Chinese generative AI platform DeepSeek says it’s sending heaps of US user data straight to its home country, potentially setting the stage for greater scrutiny.
Only a few days ago, TikTok was effectively banned in the US, before it secured a last-minute reprieve from Donald Trump. Congress and US security officials have long worried that the app, which is owned by Chinese headquartered Bytedance, could pose national security concerns.
The general hype around all things AI is not lifting all boats, as certain startups continue to struggle and look for exits. In one of the latest
Nvidia stock has been one of the biggest winners of the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution in the past couple of years, clocking remarkable gains of nearly 800% over the past two years on account of the red-hot demand for its data center graphics cards, but the past three months have been difficult for the chipmaker.
As 2025 ushers in a new era of virtualization and containerization for edge AI workloads, here are the top five trends I predict will define the evolution of edge AI.
With the rapid advance of artificial intelligence, machines no longer need us to adapt to them; rather, they’re adapting to us.
A China-based artificial intelligence startup is shaking up the industry. It’s called DeepSeek and its biggest advantage, analysts say, is that it can operate at a lower cost than American AI models like ChatGPT.