-
If India wants to stay in the global AI race, it must address the three missing pieces — talent, data, and research
-
To revitalise nation-building with advanced technologies, India needs a strong technological force like ISRO, which has made a significant mark in the international Space industry
-
Despite having the largest young workforce population, several challenges hinder India in developing cutting-edge technologies
-
Grok 3 has been rolled out for Premium+ subscribers on X. Users need to update their X app to access the new features
-
The Personal Information Protection Commission said the service was suspended at 6 pm on Saturday and will be resumed after "improvements and remedies" are made in line with South Korea's personal information protection laws
-
As China’s homegrown AI model challenges the biggies with unprecedented cost efficiency, India’s largest business house is doubling down on its own AI push with a calculated strategy
-
There is a need for equitable access to AI to avoid perpetuating a digital divide that is already existing across the world
-
Even today, while Indian engineers lead AI developments globally, we struggle to back homegrown innovations that could compete with global tech giants
-
The decision is part of South Korean government's wide initiative to limit access to DeepSeek to prevent potential leaks of critical information through generative AI services
-
India second biggest market for OpenAI says its CEO Sam Altman
-
The Chinese startup's technology is coming under scrutiny, with a few countries banning the use of the technology in government offices.
-
Move comes at a time when countries like Australia and Italy have shielded their official systems from Chinese AI platform
-
The country’s short-term approach to problem-solving is hindering its ability to compete on a global scale
-
Says teams have worked out nitty-gritty — details of how many servers are required, how much capacity would be needed
-
Interestingly, the release of the new AI model came on the first day of the Lunar New Year, when most of China is closed and people are off their work
-
DeepSeek founder Liang Wenfeng, the new face of AI, spends his days reading papers, writing code, and says Chinese AI can’t be in the position of following forever
-
AI-related stocks have been Wall Street’s biggest stars in recent years, soaring on expectations that big spending will only continue to grow. China’s DeepSeek busted that
-
DeepSeek’s AI assistant, developed at a fraction of the cost of its rivals and using less computing power, threatens to upset the technology world order
-
President Donald Trump has said that the sudden rise of the Chinese app DeepSeek “should be a wake-up call” for American companies developing artificial intelligence as they need to be laser-focused on competing to win
-
Markets in South Korea, Shanghai markets and other parts of the region were closed for holidays. Among technology companies in Japan, SoftBank Group Corp. stock extended its losses, plunging 6%. Hitachi Ltd. lost 7%, but Fujitsu and Sony Corp. recovered