Joe Biden made several attempts to curb Chinese AI advancement, but DeepSeek's launch has put those policies into question.
Donald Trump’s administration is considering stricter limits on Nvidia’s H20 chip sales to China, due to DeepSeek AI and growing concerns over the Asian giant’s AI tech advancements. The H20 chips, compliant with US restrictions,
Stocks tumbled after a Chinese AI startup said its models can compete with the likes of ChatGPT and other U.S.-based models at a fraction of the cost.
The emergence of DeepSeek's free assistant has placed big doubts over the US market's AI-driven rally of the past two years.
DeepSeek has turned the tech world upside down as the tiny Chinese company has come up with AI chatbots using just a fraction of the cost of the major players in the industry.
The European Union will raise concerns with the US over a decision to restrict the export of artificial intelligence chips from the likes of Nvidia Corp. to some of its member states, according to people familiar with the matter.
President Trump hosted executives from Softbank, OpenAI and Oracle at the White House Tuesday to announce “Stargate,” a $500BN private-sector plan to build new AI data centers.
The order focused on "Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence" and created a framework for federal oversight of artificial intelligence (AI) developers.
While AI stocks may rebound from their DeepSeek-induced market sell-off, the U.S. clearly faces a threat from China in artificial intelligence. What you should know.
President Trump has announced plans to impose tariffs on foreign-made computer chips, semiconductors, and pharmaceuticals, in particular those originating from Taiwan. In a speech to House Republicans on January 27, Trump claimed the tariffs would incentivize tech companies to manufacture chips in the US instead of Taiwan.
China’s DeepSeek is all the tech world can talk about now. But the chatbot has a censorship problem. It refuses to answer questions on sensitive subjects. When asked about Tiananmen Square or Winnie the Pooh,