The DeepSeek AI chatbot becomes tongue-tied when asked about issues seen as politically sensitive by China's Communist Party. DW tried it out.
DeepSeek, China’s new artificial intelligence model, refuses to answer certain questions about the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and responds to
China is reportedly imposing its legal system on American soil through a network of nonprofit organizations in the United States linked to a Chinese Communist Party (CCP) intelligence agency, according to the Daily Caller News Foundation (DCNF).
The 2025 edition of the Cultural Center of the Philippines's Pasinaya festival, the nations' biggest multi-arts festival, is going beyond the country's borders.
This week’s China threat is DeepSeek, an Open-Source AI platform that alarmists are signalling proves China is stealing our personal data.
Palmer Luckey, who sold Oculus to Facebook, accused the media of ignoring that a significant portion of DeepSeek’s infrastructure costs are still unknown.
DeepSeek’s adherence to CCP narratives goes beyond major sensitivities like the Tiananmen protests, potentially distorting understanding of the country – and even global affairs.
Introduction The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) poses interrelated threats to the United States’ national security, economic interests, and human rights. But for decades, policymakers have elevated national security and economic interests over human rights.
The Chinese startup DeepSeek released an AI reasoning model that appears to rival the abilities of a frontier model from OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT.
FIRST ON FOX: The Monroe Doctrine is back in full swing – both with President-elect Donald Trump’s push for a takeover of the Panama Canal and new legislation from Rep. Mark Green to encourage ...
The Chinese Communist Party uses the platform to cultivate a social consensus that undermines U.S. society.
China wants to be the dominant player in AI by 2030 and the country is plowing enormous amounts of money into the AI infrastructure to compete with the US