Chinese startup DeepSeek has shaken financial markets by presenting a new artificial intelligence (AI) model. The company from China unexpectedly caused a drop in stocks of Silicon Valley tech companies on Wall Street.
Liang Wenfeng, the founder of China’s chatbot app DeepSeek, has become a sensation overnight. He is being dubbed as the ‘AI hero’. But Liang is not alone. Meet his team of young talent which boasts of Luo Fuli,
China should play a "leading role" in counterterrorism efforts with Pakistan to prevent further attacks on Chinese personnel and projects, particularly in Balochistan province, a think tank report has said.
Last March, Chinese Premier Li Qiang opened the legislature’s annual meeting by setting an economic growth target for 2024 of “ around 5 percent .” This was considered ambitious, given the economic headwinds: a property market slump that has crimped people’s savings, high youth unemployment, factory overcapacity and sluggish retail spending.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang on Sunday held a symposium at the Great Hall of the People with representatives of foreign experts who have won the 2024 Chinese Government Friendship Award and those who are working in China.
Chinese Premier Li Qiang also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of
Peter Dutton has claimed Australia’s relationship with China will be “much stronger” should the opposition win the next election, despite the many trade sanctions enforced by Beijing during the Morrison government in response to the Coalition’s hawkish language against its biggest trading partner.
DeepSeek threatens to disrupt the AI sector in a similar way to how Chinese companies have already upended industries such as EVs and mining.
According to the analytical company Graphika, Chinese social media accounts connected to the government in Beijing supported the launch of DeepSeek's chatbot, Reuters reported on Friday. Among these accounts were profiles belonging to diplomats,
According to the analytical company Graphika, Chinese social media accounts connected to the government in Beijing supported the launch of the DeepSeek company's chatbot, reported Reuters on Friday. Among these accounts were profiles belonging to diplomats,
The seemingly overnight success of Chinese AI firm DeepSeek has catapulted its founder, Liang Wenfeng, to billionaire status. Here’s how.