Joe Biden made several attempts to curb Chinese AI advancement, but DeepSeek's launch has put those policies into question.
The order focused on "Safe, Secure, and Trustworthy Development and Use of Artificial Intelligence" and created a framework for federal oversight of artificial intelligence (AI) developers.
Tech organizations and companies blasted this week's AI moves by the Biden administration, with Nvidia slamming the U.S. president's actions and comparing current government policies unfavorably with those of president-elect Donald Trump.
Stocks tumbled after a Chinese AI startup said its models can compete with the likes of ChatGPT and other U.S.-based models at a fraction of the cost.
President Trump hosted executives from Softbank, OpenAI and Oracle at the White House Tuesday to announce “Stargate,” a $500BN private-sector plan to build new AI data centers.
The emergence of DeepSeek's free assistant has placed big doubts over the US market's AI-driven rally of the past two years.
Huang said Friday that he will instead be ‘on the road’ celebrating the Lunar New Year with employees and their families
WASHINGTON, Jan 15 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden warned on Wednesday in his ... The combined value of the group, which includes Apple, Tesla, Nvidia and Meta, has risen 46% in the past ...
President Joe Biden’s immediate challenge after inauguration was to end the COVID-19 pandemic and then shift the economy back to normal operations. The Biden administration collaborated with private retail chains to build up cold storage and distribution ...
The outgoing leadership in the Department of Education finally issued guidance on Title IX's application to NIL compensation. It's unlikely to have any impact.
DeepSeek, founded by Liang Wenfeng in 2023, rapidly gained attention by surpassing ChatGPT in the App Store. The AI startup’s low-cost models challenge US firms, prompting fears about market share loss and the effectiveness of US export restrictions on AI technology.
President Trump has announced plans to impose tariffs on computer chips, semiconductors, and pharmaceuticals from Taiwan. In a speech to House Republicans on January 27, Trump claimed the tariffs would incentivize tech companies to manufacture chips in the US instead of Taiwan.