Hackers are using the Gemini chatbot for coding, to identify attack points, and for creating fake information, Google said.
The report from Google's Threat Intelligence Group reveals hackers from Iran, China, and North Korea are using Google's Gemini chatbot to enhance operations like phishing, coding, and target research.
People across China have taken to social media to hail the success of its homegrown tech startup DeepSeek and its founder, after the company unveiled its newest artificial intelligence model, sending shock waves through Silicon Valley and Wall Street.
A looming ban on TikTok set to take effect on Sunday presents a multibillion-dollar headache for app store operators Apple and Google.
NVIDIA, the world's most valuable company until Monday, lost $600 billion of market value in a single day, the biggest in US stock history.
DeepSeek released an open-source artificial intelligence model in December, saying it took only two months and less than $6 million to create it.
Supported by the Chinese hedge fund High-Flyer, DeepSeek launched its DeepSeek-R1 large language model (LLM) on Jan. 20. Unlike ChatGPT’s subscription-based and closed-source platform, priced at $200 per month, DeepSeek-R1 is entirely open-source and free, allowing users to access, compile, and operate it on native hardware without limitations.
Suspicions were confirmed when it was discovered that popular Chinese AI DeepSeek sends a tremendous amount of user data to servers in China.
Google's own cybersecurity teams found evidence of nation-state hackers using Gemini to help with some aspects of cyberattacks.
India’s IT minister announced the country’s goal to launch competitive foundational AI models with a new compute facility housing 18,693 GPUs. This initiative aims to lower training costs significantly,