OpenAI said on Wednesday that Chinese AI startup DeepSeek's open-source models may have "inappropriately" based its work on the output of OpenAI's models, an OpenAI spokesperson told Axios. Why it matters: China's DeepSeek has taken the AI industry by storm with its R1 reasoning model that competes with OpenAI's o1,
OpenAI itself has been accused of building ChatGPT by inappropriately accessing content it didn't have the rights to.
OpenAI thinks DeepSeek may have used its AI outputs inappropriately, highlighting ongoing disputes over copyright, fair use, and training data.
The San Francisco start-up claims that its Chinese rival may have used data generated by OpenAI technologies to build new systems.
Revolutionize humanity or destroy it? Playwright Matthew Gasda's characters, inspired by OpenAI and its famous ChatGPT, grapple with existential questions about the direction of artificial intelligence.
The DeepSeek drama may have been briefly eclipsed by, you know, everything in Washington (which, if you can believe it, got even crazier Wednesday). But rest assured that over in Silicon Valley, there has been nonstop,
SoftBank is in talks to invest up to $25 billion in ChatGPT owner OpenAI, according to a person familiar with the matter, as the Japanese conglomerate continues to expand into the sector.
Indian media outlets including NDTV, The Indian Express, and Hindustan Times have requested a New Delhi court to let them join an ongoing lawsuit against OpenAI alleging copyright infringement. The Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA),
OpenAI prohibits the practice of training a new AI model by repeatedly querying a larger, pre-trained model, a technique commonly referred to as distillation, according to their terms of use. And the company suspects DeepSeek may have tried something similar,
DeepSeek has been accused of using chipsets banned for the Chinese market to train its latest AI models, despite claiming they used weaker chipsets.
Deepseek R1 just dropped, and it’s shaking up the AI world in a way we haven’t seen since the launch of ChatGPT. In this video, I’ll break it down in the simplest way possible—especially if you're new to AI.