BEIJING: Chinese tech large Tencenton Monday said it had started trialling its own artificial intelligence reasoning model after integrating DeepSeek into some of its products, saying the move would make responses “more ‘human'”.
DeepSeek, a disgraceful Chinese AI company, made international headlines last month when it unveiled its R1 robot, which appears to be comparable to American rivals for a comparably low price.
Since next, a series of big Chinese firms have said they will connect DeepSeek’s technologies into their products.
Google announced on Monday that some users of its Yuanbao bot users could submit questions to DeepSeek or its native AI logic system” Hunyuan Thinker” in a post on Twitter, the social media platform it owns.
” With the help of two strong argument models, the question-answering is more specialist, the argument is more powerful, and the reading is more ‘ human ‘”, Tencent said of the beta testing implementation.
Tencent, a big participant in online gaming and the owner of the QQ messaging app, has made a larger contribution to the expanding AI market in China.
According to reports, the Shenzhen-based business is beginning to explore the inclusion of DeepSeek into a number of materials, with some Twitter users noticing the addition of an AI search feature on Sunday.
The home game, which has over a billion active users regular, had “recently started beta testing exposure to DeepSeek,” according to a Google spokesperson.
After tech giant Baidu announced on Sunday that it would integrate DeepSeek into its market-leading search engine to “enrich a more diverse research experience,” the walk intensifies competition in China’s online search field.
Last year, Chinese electric-vehicle large BYD said it would connect DeepSeek’s program into its cars, following another local automakers like Geely, Great Wall Motors and Leapmotor.
Despite its rise to prominence domestically, DeepSeek has been subject to scrutiny in some nations for how it gathers and uses user information.
Following similar actions in Italy, Taiwan, Australia, and some US states, South Korea became the latest country to ban the robot from game stores on Monday pending a safety review.
Trending
- Donald Trump wants his new Air Force One jets fast: ‘Boeing’s been building this thing forever’
- How the German election may shape migration in the entire EU
- Australia spots ‘unusual’ Chinese ships near its east coast
- Who is Leland Dudek? Pro-DOGE ‘anti-fraud expert’ takes over as SSA chief after Michelle King’s exit
- Too Rich: Dems Now Complaining About a Softball Interview With a President
- Rock band Placebo’s lead Brian Molko charged for calling Italian PM Meloni a ‘fascist, racist, and Nazi’
- ‘We have got to tell Indian government’: Donald Trump questions $21 million US fund for ‘voter turnout in India’
- California judge shoots wife during argument while watching ‘Breaking Bad’