
DeepSeek, a Chinese AI sensation, announced on Monday that it will suspend new user registration owing to large-scale hacks on its services. On Monday, the company’s chatbot surpassed OpenAI’s ChatGPT as Apple’s most downloaded software, citing “large-scale malicious attacks” for outages and its inability to accept new users. DeepSeek, built by a start-up in the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou, has demonstrated the ability to match the capacity of AI leaders such as NVIDIA.
The low-cost Chinese generative AI venture is expected to have the same capabilities as US enterprises but at a fraction of the cost. Analysts had long believed that the United States’ critical advantage over China in creating high-powered CPUs, as well as its capacity to block the Asian giant from gaining access to the technology, would give it an advantage in the AI race.
DeepSeek, which is available as an app or on desktop, can do many of the same things as its Western counterparts, like writing music lyrics, assisting with a personal development plan, and even writing a meal dish based on what’s in the fridge. It is, however, vulnerable to the censorship observed in other Chinese-made chatbots, such as Baidu’s Ernie Bot, which limited on how they interact on political topics.
Also Read:
Elevating The Lives Of Gold Miners Of Guinea: Tidiane Koita
Bridging Language Gaps For Seamless Communication With SIYAK: Rima Boutros