Chinese AI start-up DeepSeek recently sent shock waves through US markets but how does its chatbot compare with American rivals? Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) start-up DeepSeek has become the talk of the town after spooking the US stock market,
The technology-dominated index slipped 3.07% to finish at 19,341.83. The S&P 500 shed 1.46% and closed at 6,012.28. The Dow Jones Industrial Average managed to add 289.33 points, or 0.65%, settling at 44,713.58.
The AI’s responses to queries related to dissident artists and artistic freedom were terse and biased in favor of the Chinese government.
China's AI bot DeepSeek censored answers about Hong Kong's protests, Taiwan's status and other topics when asked questions by HKFP.
Wen Shuhao helped speed up the development of Pfizer’s Covid oral drug, Paxlovid. Now the chairman of Xtalpi wants to help make better solar panels and EV batteries.
Stocks rise on bets investors will look for cheaper options after DeepSeek’s popular low-cost AI model sparked a US$1 trillion tech rout.
This AI-driven animation at the M+ Facade in Hong Kong gives the golden age of HK cinema a futuristic facelift
DeepSeek has triggered a dramatic rethink on artificial intelligence spending around the world, except perhaps in China. The startup's impressive low-cost model showcases the country's innovation prowess.
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.
Japan’s chipmaker stocks plunged into losses, while artificial intelligence and related stocks on Wall Street were hammered overnight amid concerns over the waning dominance of US tech giants in the AI space.