For nearly a decade, the Chinese Communist Party has censored Winnie the Pooh, owing to internet memes comparing the slightly ...
China’s DeepSeek is all the tech world can talk about now. But the chatbot has a censorship problem. It refuses to answer ...
Disney’s Winnie-the-Pooh has been banned on the mainland, seemingly for no reason other than the vanity of Chinese president Xi Jinping. In 2013, a photograph of Xi walking beside former US ...
China’s controversial ChatGPT rival, DeepSeek, has taken the world by storm with its powerful AI capabilities, yet its ...
The hottest new AI model is Chinese made—and it’s avoiding questions about Tiananmen Square, Taiwan and Xi Jinping.
DeepSeek said the Chinese government was "committed to the great cause" of reunification with Taiwan, an independent island ...
What this means is that if you ask it some straightforward questions like “what happened on June 4, 1989 at Tiananmen Square?
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ThePrint on MSNHow DeepSeek, China’s answer to ChatGPT, is dealing with questions that make Beijing uncomfortableAI model DeepSeek, developed by a Hangzhou-based research lab, has climbed to the top of app charts since its release on 20 ...
A Chinese AI company has shaken up Wall Street and Silicon Valley, but is it really the disruptor people think?
For many Chinese, the Winnie the Pooh character is a playful taunt of President Xi Jinping. Chinese censors in the past briefly banned social media searches for the bear in mainland China.
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