DeepSeek, China’s new artificial intelligence model, refuses to answer certain questions about the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and responds to
A new report indicates that DeepSeek's R1 reasoning model refused to answer some 85% of 1,360 sensitive-topic "prompts".
Palmer Luckey, who sold Oculus to Facebook, accused the media of ignoring that a significant portion of DeepSeek’s infrastructure costs are still unknown.
Strategic Analysis Australia Director Michael Shoebridge claims China has entered the AI arms race, but it’s with “Chinese Communist Party policies, censorship, and direction baked in”.
Introduction The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) poses interrelated threats to the United States’ national security, economic interests, and human rights. But for decades, policymakers have elevated national security and economic interests over human rights.
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is facing a cyberattack that has disrupted services while its chatbot declines to discuss political topics that are critical or sensitive for the CCP.
If Americans want their freedom and quality of life to continue well into this century, the status quo with China will not suffice.
The Chinese startup DeepSeek released an AI reasoning model that appears to rival the abilities of a frontier model from OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT.
China group is launching a five-figure ad buy in key agricultural states to warn of Chinese gains in that industry and urge state Republicans to move on the issue.
The Chinese Communist Party uses the platform to cultivate a social consensus that undermines U.S. society.
China wants to be the dominant player in AI by 2030 and the country is plowing enormous amounts of money into the AI infrastructure to compete with the US
While rival chatbots including ChatGPT collect vast quantities of user data, DeepSeek’s use of China-based servers are a key difference and a glaring privacy risk for Americans, experts told The