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Ukraine war: China aids Russian drone production with smuggled Western parts, says Estonia
Ukraine war: China aids Russian drone production with smuggled Western parts, says Estonia
Ukraine war: China aids Russian drone production with smuggled Western parts, says Estonia
China tops list of countries trying to silence exiled dissidents over past decade, study shows
China tops list of countries trying to silence exiled dissidents over past decade, study shows
China tops list of countries trying to silence exiled dissidents over past decade, study shows
Silencing dissent across borders: the free speech crisis of transnational repression
Prince Andrew wanted ‘royal institute’ to develop China links, claims alleged spy
Is Deepseek Open Source?
Hugging Face researchers are trying to build a more open version of DeepSeek’s AI ‘reasoning’ model
Hugging Face head of research Leandro von Werra and several company engineers have launched Open-R1, a project that seeks to build a duplicate of R1 and open source all of its components, including the data used to train it.
The engineers said they were compelled to act by DeepSeek’s “black box” release philosophy. Technically, R1 is “open” in that the model is permissively licensed, which means it can be deployed largely without restrictions. However, R1 isn’t “open source” by the widely accepted definition because some of the tools used to build it are shrouded in mystery. Like many high-flying AI companies, DeepSeek is loathe to reveal its secret sauce.
I feel safer knowing that my data is not in a country where the company can use it against me
Where is this country that can't use your data against you?
Is Deepseek Open Source?
Hugging Face researchers are trying to build a more open version of DeepSeek’s AI ‘reasoning’ model
Hugging Face head of research Leandro von Werra and several company engineers have launched Open-R1, a project that seeks to build a duplicate of R1 and open source all of its components, including the data used to train it.
The engineers said they were compelled to act by DeepSeek’s “black box” release philosophy. Technically, R1 is “open” in that the model is permissively licensed, which means it can be deployed largely without restrictions. However, R1 isn’t “open source” by the widely accepted definition because some of the tools used to build it are shrouded in mystery. Like many high-flying AI companies, DeepSeek is loathe to reveal its secret sauce.