DeepSeek could hit $45B valuation from its first investment round
In just a few weeks of talks, DeepSeek's potential valuation has reportedly soared from $20 billion to $45 billion.
FT AI·
Chinese AI start-up is raising funds for first time to keep researchers after several defections to rivals
Read full articleIn just a few weeks of talks, DeepSeek's potential valuation has reportedly soared from $20 billion to $45 billion.
Value soars in ongoing fundraising discussions as investors including Tencent seek slice of AI lab
China made the inner workings of the A.I. model open to all, and that’s starting to look like a soft-power win.
Researchers say works may have been incorrectly inscribed in 1700s, leading to centuries-long misunderstanding They are two small sketches by the Renaissance master Hans Holbein: one has long been considered to be a portrait of Henry VIII’s doomed second wife, Anne Boleyn, and the other is of an unknown woman whose name was lost to time. Now researchers using AI have discovered that the unnamed woman might be the tragic queen after all, while the other figure could in fact be Boleyn’s mother. Continue reading...
Using AI tools, the team reworked part of the ribosome to need one less amino acid.
DeepSeek’s latest AI model was poised for a major launch. And yet, the markets did not react as expected to the release of DeepSeek’s V4 preview, despite the Chinese startup making technical headway with its latest software. Investors are less likely to swoon at the announcement of a more powerful, more efficient, and less expensive AI model. They know what we mean, and they’re waiting for it to do something impressive. This is not to imply that DeepSeek failed at its most recent endeavor, because it clearly did not. While its latest model has outperformed predecessors, it still solidifies China’s […]
April 2026 turned out to be one of the most explosive months in AI history. OpenAI dropped GPT-5.5, Anthropic sparked debate by withholding Claude Mythos, and new releases from Google, DeepSeek, and other Chinese labs pushed reasoning, agentic capabilities, and multimodality to new heights.
Chatbots trained to respond warmly give poorer answers and worse health advice, researchers say The rush to make AI chatbots more friendly has a troubling downside, researchers say. The warm personas make them prone to mistakes and sympathetic to crackpot beliefs. Chatbots trained to respond more warmly gave poorer answers, worse health advice and even supported conspiracy theories by casting doubt on events such as the Apollo moon landings and the fate of Adolf Hitler. Continue reading...