Adrian Weckler: How China’s DeepSeek AI is making a mockery of its trillion-dollar American rivals
5 Articles
5 Articles
Adrian Weckler: How China’s DeepSeek AI is making a mockery of its trillion-dollar American rivals
This week, a small Chinese start-up made a mockery of the world’s trillion-dollar AI companies, of Donald Trump and of a host of others in between. It’s the only tech story people are talking about, because it questions our whole understanding of what’s needed for AI, from money to subscription models to how many data centres and electricity boosts we need to ‘power AI’.
Recommended Watch: China hands America a trillion dollar wake-up call
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‘ChatGPT tu hai ek wannabe’: China’s DeepSeek gets ‘mic drop’ moment, roasts its American AI rival
Source: Live Mint DeepSeek, the Chinese AI application, has gained widespread popularity since its debut. From the US stock market crash and data security concerns to reports of biases, DeepSeek has managed to make headlines throughout the week. Intrigued by this latest tech innovation, a social media user decided to try it out. But she didn’t want her DeepSeek trial to be a general query, so she pitched it against its American rival, OpenAI’s…
Cui Bono from DeepSeek’s $4 trillion Double-Murder? - Fat Tail Daily
This week, the Chinese committed a $4 trillion double-murder. Their new AI app DeepSeek wiped $2 trillion off the US stock market. And called another $2 trillion in AI related capital expenditure into question. If AI can be made so much more efficient, do we really need all those computer chips from NVIDIA? If not, do we really need all those data centres to keep them cool? And do we even want the small modular reactors that’ll power them? On Mo…
DeepSeek’s Chatbot Works Like Its U.S. Rivals—Until You Ask About Tiananmen
(Wall Street Journal) – Chinese tech company DeepSeek has disrupted the AI world by releasing a top-notch artificial-intelligence model that offers provocative answers—although maybe not to questions about China. We put its chatbot to the test in New York on Tuesday and Wednesday, asking it a battery of questions on sensitive topics that are routinely the subject of censorship within China, including the so-called taboo “three Ts”: Tiananmen, Ta…
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