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.
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.
The AI contender to the apparent market leader finished a $2 million funding round and now has a $60 billion valuation.
16.5 x 16.5 x 16.5 in. (41.9 x 41.9 x 41.9 cm.) London, Tate, The Unilever Series: Ai Weiwei Sunflower Seeds, exh. cat., 2010-2011, p. 63, no. 47 (another unique ...
Authors and artists have accused OpenAI of stealing their content to 'train' its bots--but now OpenAI is accusing a Chinese company of stealing its content to train its bots.
Analysts say China’s AI investment is just beginning to pay off, with more firms expected to launch their own models soon.
Amodei says the breakthrough actually cost billions, emphasizing that AI development remains resource-intensive despite engineering gains.
Founded just 20 months ago in Alibaba’s home city of Hangzhou, DeepSeek has upended the industry with its low-cost, high-performance AI models. The pressure is now on established players like Alibaba,
The assistant is unable to answer on some political topics affecting China and fiercely defends the regime on others. DeepSeek has turned the world of artificial intelligence upside down and caused billion-dollar losses to Silicon Valley and numerous companies worldwide linked to the microchip sector and data centers.
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Existing open-source AI approaches are still not entirely open, which is a challenge that former Google and Apple engineers alongside a coalition of 13 universities are looking to solve.