A new investment from the Japanese conglomerate would be separate from the $100 billion tied to a project announced at the White House last week.
Here's what you need to know this week about artificial intelligence in the Bay Area: China's DeepSeek stirs things up, new Seattle-based AI research startup Oumi launches, VCs pour millions into radiology software,
Venture capitalists plowed money into A.I. start-ups like OpenAI and Anthropic. But the rise of the Chinese A.I. start-up DeepSeek has called that funding frenzy into question.
Chinese chatbot could threaten the office leasing recovery in San Francisco fueled in part by artificial intelligence firms.
As AI technologies like ChatGPT continue to evolve, their intersection with copyright law is becoming a global legal battleground. The outcome of this case in India could set important precedents for how generative AI is regulated,
SAN FRANCISCO/BEIJING (Financial Times) -- OpenAI says it has found evidence that Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek used the U.S. company's proprietary models to train its own open-source competitor, as concerns grow over a potential breach of intellectual property.
The announcement confirms one of two rumors that circled the internet this week. The other was about superintelligence.
The pictures disclosed in the new Daily Mail article show a blood-stained floor where Suchir Balaji’s head lay. There are splatters of blood in and around the bathroom as well. The apartment is relatively organized besides the disheveled room near the scene of alleged suicide.
Top White House advisers this week expressed alarm that China's DeepSeek may have benefited from a method that allegedly piggybacks off the advances of U.S. rivals called "distillation."
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The company built a cheaper, competitive chatbot with fewer high-end computer chips than U.S. behemoths like Google and OpenAI, showing the limits of chip export control.
That's what ChatGPT maker OpenAI is suggesting, along with U.S. President Donald Trump's top AI adviser. Neither has disclosed specific evidence of intellectual property theft, but the comments could fuel a reexamination of some of the assumptions that led to a panic in the U.S. over DeepSeek's advancements.