DeepSeek, a new Chinese chatbot, alarmed American political circles this week. Now, Chinese dissident artists like Ai Weiwei are crying foul.
The AI’s responses to queries related to dissident artists and artistic freedom were terse and biased in favor of the Chinese government.
Top White House advisers this week expressed alarm that China's DeepSeek may have benefited from a method that allegedly piggybacks off the advances of U.S. rivals called "distillation."
The sudden rise of Chinese AI app DeepSeek has leaders in Washington and Silicon Valley grappling with how to keep the U.S. ahead in the crucial technology.
Links in your inbox every weekday, sign up for our Breakfast with ARTnews newsletter. The Headlines SUSPECTS NABBED AFTER DUTCH MUSEUM HEIST. Three suspects have been arrested after the theft of ancient gold Romanian artifacts form a Dutch museum,
U.S. companies were spooked when the Chinese startup released models said to match or outperform leading American ones at a fraction of the cost.
Led by major retrospectives of Ai Weiwei, Wayne Thiebaud, Ruth Asawa, Rashid Johnson and more, these shows illuminate new ways to appreciate top artists, past and present.
Gary Marcus, a cognitive scientist and an author of Rebooting.AI, told Newsweek: "Nobody has landed on the moon yet, or will they soon, but China has basically caught up to the U.S. in the flawed and faddish techniques of generative AI."
The 40-year-old founder of China's DeepSeek, an AI startup that has startled markets with its capacity to compete with industry leaders like OpenAI, kept a low profile as he built up a hedge fund that now manages a reported $8 billion in assets.
People across China are hailing the success of homegrown ... in reference to the US tech giant that’s invested heavily in developing its own AI models. More than a dozen hashtags related to ...
Chinese tech company Alibaba released a new version of the Qwen 2.5 artificial intelligence model that surpasses DeepSeek's latest model.