The prime minister’s bumbling answer to a press club question on Australia’s engagement in the AI arms race shows how complacent political and business leaders are.
Prominent technology chiefs offer their views on the sudden rise of DeepSeek: it’s a game changer, competition is good and expect more market gyrations.
The rising popularity of DeepSeek, a Chinese AI platform, has raised data privacy concerns. While Australia has asked users to be cautious, Italy’s Data Protection Agency has posed questions about how the chatbot uses personal data.
Trump's Stargate AI initiative has resulted in backlash, including from Elon Musk. But what is it and how could it affect Australian AI?
The company has surged in popularity, with technology it claims is on par with competitors such as OpenAI and Meta's most advanced models.
The announcement is set to reshape the tech sector and create hundreds of thousands of jobs. Where does Australia fit in, and what does Elon Musk have to say?
The ASX 200 index closed 0.6% higher on Thursday after briefly hitting a record high of 8515 points as investors eyed the chance of a rate cut from the RBA.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman recently took to X (formerly Twitter) praising the debut of its rival, a Chinese AI startup called DeepSeek. Currently, DeepSeek has released the R1 and R1 zero, but Altman is quite impressed with the first one.
DeepSeek is the new AI model that's on everybody's lips –here's all the latest news on the ChatGPT competitor.
Chinese AI chatbot DeepSeep became the top-rated free app on Apple play store in the United States, leading to a crash in the US stock market.
The Italian data protection authority, GPDP, has demanded DeepSeek supply information on its handling of Italians’ user data. This includes the type of data collected, how it is stored and whether that data is stored on Chinese servers. It is out to ensure compliance with the EU’s GDPR rules.