DeepSeek has captured the world's attention, but the chatbot doesn’t want to talk about what happened at Tiananmen Square.
We put its chatbot to the test in New York on Tuesday and Wednesday, asking it a battery of questions on sensitive topics ...
A user named Daniel Nguyen prompted a question about Tiananmen Square to DeepSeek— first time in English and later in ...
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has made a big splash with its ChatGPT competitor, claiming that it developed its AI assistant at ...
Previously little-known Chinese startup DeepSeek has dominated headlines and app charts in recent days thanks to its new AI ...
China’s AI chatbot DeepSeek has sparked controversy for its refusal to discuss sensitive topics like the Tiananmen Square ...
Users are jailbreaking DeepSeek to discuss censored topics like Tiananmen Square, Taiwan, and the Cultural Revolution.
What this means is that if you ask it some straightforward questions like “what happened on June 4, 1989 at Tiananmen Square?
The success of a Chinese company in producing such an efficient AI model despite sanctions on computer chip exports by the ...
DeepSeeks AI delivers responses comparable to ChatGPT, but its China-hosted version shows differences, particularly in ...
Nvidia, the pioneer of AI infrastructure, was the worst-hit by the Deepseek shock. The company suffered the worst single-day ...
The chatbot from China appears to perform a number of tasks as well as its American competitors do, but it censors topics ...