Chinese-owned DeepSeek AI was also unable to provide any information on Tiananmen Square when asked by Newsweek.
I asked Chinese AI DeepSeek a bunch of questions, and I have a few privacy and security tips if you want to try it, too.
Asked about sensitive topics, the bot would begin to answer, then stop and delete its own work. It refused to answer questions like: “Who is Xi Jinping?” ...
Social media exploded in a celebration after the news that a Chinese start-up had made an artificial intelligence tool that ...
In what President Donald Trump called a "wake-up call" for U.S. tech companies (implicating members of his innermost circle, ...
The hottest new AI model is Chinese made—and it’s avoiding questions about Tiananmen Square, Taiwan and Xi Jinping.
What this means is that if you ask it some straightforward questions like “what happened on June 4, 1989 at Tiananmen Square?
DeepSeek's chatbot's answer echoed China's official statements, saying the relationship between the world's two largest ...
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is facing a cyberattack that has disrupted services while its chatbot declines to discuss ...
The fallout from the seemingly overnight surge in interest around DeepSeek was swift, and severe: The company’s AI model, ...