The tech industry is used to change. But it's wild to see this much all at once. Let's put it into perspective.
Earlier this week, almost overnight, the American tech industry entered a full-on panic. The latest version of DeepSeek, an ...
Previously little-known Chinese startup DeepSeek has dominated headlines and app charts in recent days thanks to its new AI chatbot, which sparked a global tech sell-off that wiped billions off ...
Export controls need to be tightened after revelations the Chinese company used Nvidia technology, the leaders of a congressional committee said.
Talk of luring engineers follows mainland start-up DeepSeek's emergence and ensuing shock waves felt by major American tech ...
DeepSeek AI has hit the industry ​​segment with a bang, but its growing popularity is raising national security concerns ...
There's no way of proving this means DeepSeek is in any form of continued relationship with authorities, though it does raise questions about the nature of information received on the platform.
According to DeepSeek’s own privacy policy, the company collects users’ keystrokes, text and audio input, uploaded files, feedback, chat history and other content for the purpose of training its AI ...
While banning the Chinese app, blamed globally for misinformation and political influencing, in 2020 was the right step, ...
With its servers based in China and global scrutiny of Chinese tech firms at an all-time high, people are starting to ask: is DeepSeek just another smooth talker with something to hide?
Sputnik was the name of the first Soviet satellite, which was launched Oct. 4, 1957. It caught the United States by surprise ...