Meta's top AI scientist, Yann LeCun, said there was a "major misunderstanding" about how billions in AI investment will be used.
DeepSeek just shook up the artificial intelligence (AI) world in the biggest way since OpenAI launched ChatGPT in late 2022. The Chinese company's new R1 large language model (LLM) reportedly matches or beats OpenAI's o1 model on some benchmarks.
Can we put a pause on the AI Cold War narrative? The true star in the DeepSeek disruption story is open source AI.
DeepSeek claims its R1 outperforms OpenAI’s latest o1 model despite costing a fraction of the price the U.S. AI lab charges for its large language models.
Meta's chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, says that a "new paradigm of AI architectures" will emerge in the next three to five years, going far beyond the
Meta’s Yann LeCun asserts open-source AI is the future, as the Chinese open-source model DeepSeek challenges ChatGPT and Llama, reshaping the AI race.
Meta's chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, says DeepSeek's success with R1 says more about the value of open source than Chinese competition.
With AI, though, it’s different. The stakes are different – the impact on our society and our personal lives is different. So it helps to know a little more about how AI agents, LLMs and neural nets, are making decisions and processing what’s around them.
DeepSeek-R1 charts a new path for AI through explaining its own reasoning process. Why does this matter and how will it benefit the world?
Meta is in crisis mode after DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup, launched a game-changing AI model. Reports indicate that Meta assembled four “war rooms” to investigate how the new model, backed by High-Flyer Capital Management,
Meta's chief AI scientist predicts that in the next three to five years, we will enter the decade of robotics.
Mark Zuckerberg said Wednesday it was too soon to say how advancements by DeepSeek, a Chinese startup, would impact Meta's heavy investments in AI.