From Washington’s perspective, the news raised an immediate policy alarm: It happened despite consistent, bipartisan efforts to stifle AI progress in China. Both President Donal
Deepseek is starting to raise flags as the tech community responds with mockery amid allegations the Chinese startup is copying the copiers.
The Chinese model’s stunning success is bolstering arguments that U.S. AI policy should spur innovation rather than slowing it down.
The generative AI boom has raised complex, multibillion-dollar legal questions that courts across the country are in the early stages of trying to address. A new report from the U.S. Copyright Office might help with at least one of them.
The Chinese artificial intelligence firm DeepSeek has rattled markets with claims its latest AI model performs on a par with those of OpenAI, despite using less advanced, more energy efficient computer chips.
Artists can copyright works they made with the help of artificial intelligence, according to a new report by the U.S.
A powerful new AI tool created by a Chinese start-up that sent shockwaves through Wall Street and Silicon Valley has put American tech companies on notice.
Few expect Donald Trump to ease Biden-era limitations on China's ability to get advanced chips in the wake of DeepSeek's success.
U.S. officials are looking at the national security implications of the Chinese artificial intelligence app DeepSeek, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday, while President Donald Trump's crypto czar said it was possible that intellectual property theft could have been at play.
Bellevue-based artificial intelligence lab Oumi launched Wednesday with $10 million in seed funding.
The revelation that China’s DeepSeek has built a better artificial intelligence (AI) mousetrap than its much richer American counterparts set off a panic among tech investors Monday, causing the
OpenAI will put its models on a supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratory and make them available to researchers at other U.S. national laboratories under a deal with the government announced Thursday.