After spending years indiscriminately ripping off other people's work and getting sued for copyright infringement left and right, OpenAI is trying to pin blame on Chinese AI startup DeepSeek. As the Financial Times reports,
ChatGPT maker says it will need extra protection from US government, following emergence of Chinese rival, DeepSeek.
However, the consensus is that DeepSeek is superior to ChatGPT for more technical tasks. If you use AI chatbots for logical reasoning, coding, or mathematical equations, you might want to try DeepSeek because you might find its outputs better.
Sam Altman’s company expressed concern Wednesday that DeepSeek’s model had improperly used components of OpenAI’s model.
It’s impossible to look at the Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek’s new AI model without comparing it against OpenAI, the dominant American rival.
OpenAI allegedly has evidence that China trained its industry-shaking DeepSeek with OpenAI's data, forcing the company to confront how it will prevent this moving forward.
This week the U.S. tech sector was routed by the Chinese launch of DeepSeek, and Sen. Josh Hawley is putting forth legislation to prevent that from happening again.
As DeepSeek rattles the tech industry, OpenAI is charging ahead with a new product release: ChatGPT Gov. On Tuesday, OpenAI announced a "tailored" ChatGPT version for government agencies with enhanced cybersecurity frameworks that can be deployed on Microsoft Azure's government cloud servers or Azure commercial.
The artificial-intelligence startup said Chinese entities have tried to exfiltrate data from its tools.
OpenAI claims that DeepSeek has infringed on its intellectual property for its AI model, and the US Navy bans the Chinese model.
Chinese AI lab DeepSeek has released a new image generator, Janus-Pro-7B, which the company says is better than competitors.