The artificial intelligence tool (IA) generated chaos in the US financial markets after its launch.
Deepseek, a Chinese application of artificial intelligence chatbots (IA) that was launched last week, caused chaos in the US markets because it is more competitive than the technologies created by large American technological companies and has raised questions about the future of the domain from ‘Ia in the United States.
BBC analyzed how the app works.
Deepseek seems and behaves like any other chatbot, even if it tends to chat excessively.
Just like the chatgpt of Openi or Google Gemini, open the app (or the website) and ask questions about anything, and asks your best to provide an answer.
The answers are long and chatbots does not express opinions, no matter how one requires.
Chatbot usually begins his answer by saying that the topic in question is “highly subjective”-political (“Donald Trump is a good president of the United States?”) Or soda (“What is tastier, pepsi or coca-Cola ? “
Deepseek does not even commit to saying if he is better than the AI Ai Ai D’Apenai assistant, chatgpt, but weighed the pros and cons of both. Chatgpt has done exactly the same and also used a very similar language.
Deepseek claims to have been trained with data until October 2023 and although the app seems to have access to current information, such as the date today, the version of the site does not do so.
This is not different from the previous versions of Chatgpt and is probably a similar protection attempt to prevent chatbots from disseminating incorrect real time information.
Deepseek is very fast in his answers, but has suffered from excessive questions from users since viral this week.
But there is a specific area in which the app does not look at at all with its American rivals: deepseek censors when he receives questions about prohibited issues in China.
Sometimes it starts to answer, which then disappears from the screen and is replaced by “let’s talk about something else”.
A taboo topic are the 1989 protests in Heavenly Peace Square, which ended with 200 civilians killed by the military, according to the Chinese government – other estimates range from hundreds to many thousands.
But Deepseek does not answer any question, or even more widely on what happened in China that day.
The chatgpt developed in the United States, compared, is not censored in his responses on Heavenly Peace Square.
Kayla Blomquist, researcher and director of the Oxford Internet Institute of the Oxford China Policy Lab, says the Chinese government is “relatively not very involved” with the application.
“I would say that there is a change, since we have seen an advertising advertisement of the central government only last week, so it will probably report a change in the future.”

Deepseek is provided with the same warnings as any other chatbot as regards the accuracy and has the appearance and feeling of most established artificial intelligence assistants already used by millions.
Many, especially those who do not sign the first time services, will probably notice few differences.
Imagine a mathematical problem, in which the real response has 32 decimal places, but the abbreviated version has eight.
It’s not so good, but for most people, it doesn’t matter.
It may be that the application has been able to reduce costs, but we know that it has been built at least in part on the shoulders of the giants: it uses Nvidia chips – although older and cheaper versions – and uses the open source open source architecture, As well as the equivalent of Alibaba Qwen.
“I think this challenge totally the idea of monetization strategies that many of the main artificial intelligence companies in the United States have had,” says Blomquist.
“It is indicating potential methods of development of models that are much less intense in calculation and resources, which would potentially signal a paradigm change, although this is not confirmed and it is not yet seen. We will see what will happen in the coming months.”
Source: Terra

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