A new investment from the Japanese conglomerate would be separate from the $100 billion tied to a project announced at the White House last week.
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,
DeepSeek sent the tech industry and financial markets spiraling this month with the release of its supposedly low-cost AI model called R1. But the Financial Times reported today that OpenAI has evidence a group linked to DeepSeek may have violated its terms of service preventing users from taking “output to develop models that compete with OpenAI.”
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.
Deepseek is starting to raise flags as the tech community responds with mockery amid allegations the Chinese startup is copying the copiers.
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,
The new agreement “includes changes to the exclusivity on new capacity, moving to a model where Microsoft has a right of first refusal (ROFR),” Microsoft says. “To further support OpenAI, Microsoft has approved OpenAI’s ability to build additional capacity, primarily for research and training of models.”
The tech giant’s sales of apps and services helped profit grow 7 percent from a year ago, even as the company contended with slumping sales in China.
Scarlett Johansson has been in a lot of iconic roles over the years but she turned down one major opportunity because it went against her 'core values'