The cause of investors’ panic was DeepSeek, an obscure Chinese hedge fund turned AI startup that has blown analysts away with its latest large language model, R1, released on January 20th. Consumers have flocked to DeepSeek’s chatbot,
Apple on Thursday disclosed its iPhone sales dipped slightly during the holiday-season quarter, signaling a sluggish start to the trendsetting company’s effort to catch up to the rest of Big Tech in the race to bring artificial intelligence to the masses.
Have American tech companies completely misunderstood what they should do with Large Language Models? It certainly looks that way.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said the company will invest billions in AI despite the DeepSeek surprise; wants Llama 4 to lead the market.
The president joined leaders from OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank to launch the ambitious project, but questions remain about its implementation, offerings and timeline.
Italy's data protection authority said on Thursday it had blocked Chinese artificial intelligence model DeepSeek over a lack of information on its use of personal data. DeepSeek could not be accessed on Wednesday in Apple or Google app stores in Italy,
The US Copyright Office has released new guidance on what protections AI generated art may enjoy, and there aren't many.
New guidance from the US Copyright Office says AI images and the prompts used to create them are not copyrightable.
The company has heavily advertised AI features since the latest iPhones were released in September.
Amid the industry fervor over DeepSeek, the Seattle-based Allen Institute for AI (Ai2) released a significantly larger version of its Tülu 3 AI model, aiming to further advance the field of open-source artificial intelligence and demonstrate its own techniques for enhancing the capabilities of AI models.
OpenAI may have billions of dollars in the bank. But it's gearing up to raise billions more, according to a Wall Street Journal report.