OpenAI has banned several accounts from China using its AI to create sales pitches for a social media surveillance company.
ByteDance’s Seed department has recruited Wu Yonghui, a ‘Google Fellow’ who worked at the American tech giant for 17 years.
The banned accounts were generating descriptions for a social media listening tool. This tool was claimed to provide real-time reports about protests in the West to Chinese security services.
The disruptive success of DeepSeek has highlighted the growing number of smaller Chinese AI firms reshaping the AI race.
ByteDance is set to undergo a restructuring of its artificial intelligence (AI) department, poaching an expert from Google to ...
The other day I had cause to share a thought on social media about the superiority (yet, and probably forever) of human over artificial intelligence. A few folks found the post hilarious and someone ...
A Chinese artificial intelligence app called DeepSeek has caught the attention of the global tech industry. It was released on the 20th of January, and has quickly risen to the top of the Apple ...
The number of weekly users of OpenAI's ChatGPT in South Korea exceeded 2 million for the first time this month, data showed ...