Every request made to OpenAI's chatbot, which is able to generate all kinds of responses to natural-language queries, consumes 2.9 watt-hours of electricity.
The PIPC also plans to ask how DeepSeek uses personal data for AI training purposes, reports Yonhap news agency.
Taiwan's Ministry of Digital Affairs said Friday all government agencies and critical infrastructure should not use DeepSeek because it "endangers national information security".
Water keeping the banks of servers at optimal temperature is "unfit for human consumption... laden with minerals and ...
The Friday afternoon meeting came as the government is set to further restrict AI chip exports this spring to ensure advanced computing power remains in the United States and among its allies, while ...
STMicroelectronics: A spokesperson for ST could not confirm the figures, but pointed to remarks CEO Jean-Marc Chery made at ...
An official with Meta's popular WhatsApp chat service said Israeli spyware company Paragon Solutions had targeted scores of its users, including jour ...
OpenAI, which is facing new challenges from Chinese startup DeepSeek's breakthrough cheap AI computing, has maintained it builds its AI models using public information in line with fair use principles ...
Eaton Corporation on Friday forecast 2025 adjusted profit above Wall Street estimates, expecting demand for electrical equipment to remain strong due to an artificial intelligence-related data center ...
At-led True Wireless Stereo (TWS) audio wearable segment had around 34 per cent market share in the second quarter of 2024, ...
Apple, as it ranked among the top five in Q4 2024, achieving record shipments in a single quarter and ending the year with ...
That approach paid off earlier this week, when China's DeepSeek unveiled free AI technology that sparked fears of price wars, ...