There's a new entrant in the Artificial Intelligence chatbot market from China. It is competing with giants like OpenAI, Gemini, ClaudeAI, etc. disrupting the American hegemony in AI-based generative chatbot models.
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has taken the tech world by storm with its cost-effective, high-performance chatbot, which was developed for under $6 million—far less than the billions spent by US tech giants like OpenAI.
Two years later, Altman's dismissal seems to have been proven completely wrong with the debut of DeepSeek, a Chinese AI chatbot that was ostensibly trained for just US$5.6 million (S$7.6 million). DeepSeek is thus challenging entrenched assumptions about the AI industry, and shaking up the "Big Tech" world.
Sam Altman acknowledged DeepSeek’s impressive performance, stating on X (formerly Twitter) that the competition is “invigorating.” However, he emphasized that OpenAI is focused on delivering “much bet
Elon Musk asked a judge to block OpenAI's attempt to transition from nonprofit to for-profit. It's not the first time he's feuded with CEO Sam Altman.
DeepSeek, the new chatbot that seemingly dethroned ChatGPT, is all over the news. Here's everything that happened in the last 24 hours.
President Donald Trump and OpenAI chief Sam Altman weighed in on the buzz surrounding DeepSeek, a Chinese artificial intelligence startup that rocked the U.S. tech sector on Monday.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced on Thursday that the new o3-mini reasoning model will power ChatGPT chat sessions for free tier users.
OpenAI is seeking to raise $40 billion in a new funding that could elevate its valuation to an astonishing $430 billion, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal on Thursday.Japan's
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman praised Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s R1 model on Monday, describing it as "impressive." However, he also added that OpenAI will
After several days of silence, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has finally ... ability to deliver a similar AI chatbot experience while relying on far less compute. Altman is arguing that even more compute ...