AI, DeepSeek and Zuckerberg
Meta's chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, said DeepSeek's success with R1 said more about the value of open-source than Chinese competition.
Meta’s Yann LeCun asserts open-source AI is the future, as the Chinese open-source model DeepSeek challenges ChatGPT and Llama, reshaping the AI race.
Meta is increasingly concerned about DeepSeek, a Chinese AI firm, as its model outperforms traditional leaders at a lower cost. Meta’s chief AI scientist views it as a win for open-source development,
Meta, Nvidia, and other tech giants react to DeepSeek's competitive, cost-efficient models that challenge established market players.
Meta has urgently assembled as many as four “war rooms” to determine how DeepSeek managed to release a game-changing AI assistant.
Mark Zuckerberg has long championed Meta Platforms Inc.’s open-source approach to artificial intelligence software — which lets other companies access and build on top of its technology — saying that having an American model as the underpinning of new products was key to ensuring US dominance over China in AI.
A Chinese artificial-intelligence company has Silicon Valley raving, calling it "amazing and impressive,"despite working with less-advanced chips.
T he United States is home to some of the biggest AI companies like Google, Meta, OpenAI, Anthropic, and more. No wonder, the country has been one of the undisputed leaders in the
China's DeepSeek is pressure-testing Zuckerberg’s strategy of embracing the open-source approach to AI development.
Application error: a client-side exception has occurred (see the browser console for more information).
While DeepSeek's efficient AI model sent American tech stocks tumbling, experts say the real disruption isn't what Wall Street thinks it is.