DeepSeek, Chinese AI Startup Roiling US Tech Giants 

The building housing the headquarters of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is seen in Hangzhou, in China's eastern Zhejiang province on January 28, 2025. (AFP)
The building housing the headquarters of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is seen in Hangzhou, in China's eastern Zhejiang province on January 28, 2025. (AFP)
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DeepSeek, Chinese AI Startup Roiling US Tech Giants 

The building housing the headquarters of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is seen in Hangzhou, in China's eastern Zhejiang province on January 28, 2025. (AFP)
The building housing the headquarters of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is seen in Hangzhou, in China's eastern Zhejiang province on January 28, 2025. (AFP)

Chinese startup DeepSeek, which has sparked panic on Wall Street with its powerful new chatbot developed at a fraction of the cost of its competitors, was founded by a hedge fund whizz-kid who believes AI can change the world.

Based out of the eastern Chinese city of Hangzhou - sometimes known as "China's Silicon Valley" - DeepSeek has come seemingly out of nowhere to release a cutting-edge product.

But in China it was already making waves, last year dubbed the "Pinduoduo of AI" -- a reference to a popular online shopping app that steamrolled big players like Alibaba with its low prices.

DeepSeek has won plaudits for its cost-effectiveness and praise in China for its seeming ability to navigate US sanctions that have aimed to prevent access to the high-tech chips needed to power the AI revolution.

AFP paid visits to the firm's offices in both Hangzhou and the capital Beijing on Tuesday, but offices appeared closed for the Lunar New Year holidays.

The firm is the child of tech and business prodigy Liang Wenfeng, born in 1985 and an engineering graduate of Hangzhou's prestigious Zhejiang University, where he has said he became convinced "artificial intelligence would change the world".

He spent years trying to work out how to apply AI to a number of different fields, according to an interview with Chinese investment news outlet Waves last year.

But he eventually struck gold with High-Flyer, a quantitative investing firm specializing in using AI to analyze stock market patterns.

That technique brought in tens of billions of yuan in assets managed, and made it one of China's top quantitative hedge funds.

"We just do things according to our own pace, then calculate costs and prices," Liang told Waves.

"Our principle is to not subsidize or make a huge profit."

For Liang, DeepSeek was always a passion project.

In 2021, the Financial Times reported, he began purchasing Nvidia graphic processing units for a side project - an account also featured in a local media report on the firm.

Associates told Waves he is "not at all like a boss and much more like a geek", with a "terrifying ability to learn".

And his passion project has now shocked industry experts and triggered a plummet in the shares of US chip-making giant Nvidia.

It also brought Liang right into the corridors of power.

Last week, he appeared in a lineup of other key business representatives meeting with China's second-ranking leader, Premier Li Qiang, at a seminar to solicit opinions on the government's economic work for the year ahead.

Footage of the meeting from Chinese state broadcaster CCTV showed a moppy-haired Liang wearing thick-rimmed glasses addressing Li, who sat listening intently from his chair opposite.

Beijing has good reason to be pleased: DeepSeek's success called into question the vast sums of money funneled by tech giants into developing advanced generative AI, as well as the ability of Western sanctions to prevent Chinese competitors from keeping up -- or even winning.

US President Donald Trump said it was a "wake-up call" for Silicon Valley, and tech investor and ally Marc Andreessen declared it was "AI's Sputnik moment".

It also amplified calls for Washington to get even tougher on restricting Chinese firms from getting hold of high-tech chips.

In his interview with Waves, Liang acknowledged that the toughest obstacle has been those US curbs.

"Money has never been the problem we face; it's the embargo on high-end chips," he said.

But beyond the geopolitics, the "geeky" AI guru said he hoped the technology could help us understand deeper things about the human mind.

"We hypothesize that the essence of human intelligence might be language, and human thought could essentially be a linguistic process," he said.

"What you think of as 'thinking' might actually be your brain weaving language."



Meta Reportedly Delays Release of Phoenix Mixed-reality Glasses to 2027

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Meta is seen at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Meta is seen at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
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Meta Reportedly Delays Release of Phoenix Mixed-reality Glasses to 2027

FILE PHOTO: The logo of Meta is seen at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: The logo of Meta is seen at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris, France, June 11, 2025. REUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes/File Photo

Meta is delaying the release of its Phoenix mixed-reality glasses until 2027, aiming to get the details right, Business Insider reported on Friday, citing an internal memo.

The delay from an initially planned release in the second half of 2026 is because the company wants a fully polished device, the report said.

Meta did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the report.

Meta executives Gabriel Aul and Ryan Cairns said moving the release date back is "going to give us a lot more breathing room to get the details right," the report added.

The goggles, previously code-named Puffin, weigh around 100 grams (3.5 ounces) and have lower-resolution displays and weaker computing performance than high-end headsets like Apple’s Vision Pro, the Information reported in July.

Mixed reality merges augmented and virtual reality and allows real-world and digital objects to interact.

Meta is expected to make budget cuts of up to 30% for its metaverse initiative, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday.

The metaverse group sits within Reality Labs, which produces the company's Quest mixed-reality headsets, smart glasses made with EssilorLuxottica's Ray-Ban and upcoming augmented-reality glasses.


Apple, Google Send New Round of Cyber Threat Notifications to Users Around World

The Apple logo is seen in this illustration taken September 24, 2025. (Reuters)
The Apple logo is seen in this illustration taken September 24, 2025. (Reuters)
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Apple, Google Send New Round of Cyber Threat Notifications to Users Around World

The Apple logo is seen in this illustration taken September 24, 2025. (Reuters)
The Apple logo is seen in this illustration taken September 24, 2025. (Reuters)

Apple and Google have sent a new round of cyber threat notifications to users around the world, the companies said this week, announcing their latest effort to insulate customers against surveillance threats.

Apple and the Alphabet-owned Google are two of several tech companies that regularly issue warnings to users when they determine they may have been targeted by state-backed hackers.

Apple said the warnings were issued on Dec. 2 but gave few further details about the alleged hacking activity and did not address questions about the number of users targeted or say who was thought to be conducting the surveillance.

Apple said that "to date we have notified users in over 150 countries in total."

Apple's statement follows Google's Dec. 3 announcement that it was warning all known users targeted using Intellexa spyware, which it said spanned "several hundred accounts across various countries, including Pakistan, Kazakhstan, Angola, Egypt, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia, and Tajikistan."

Google said in its announcement that Intellexa, a cyber intelligence company that is sanctioned by the US government, was "evading restrictions and thriving."

Executives tied to Intellexa did not immediately return messages.

Previous waves of warnings have triggered headlines and prompted investigations by government bodies, including the European Union, whose senior officials have previously been targeted using spyware.

Threat notifications impose costs on cyber spies by alerting victims, said John Scott-Railton, a researcher with the Canadian digital watchdog group Citizen Lab.

He said they were "also often the first step in a string of investigations and discoveries that can lead to real accountability around spyware abuses."


AI Bubble to Be Short-lived, Rebound Stronger, NTT DATA Chief Says

FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
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AI Bubble to Be Short-lived, Rebound Stronger, NTT DATA Chief Says

FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: Figurines with computers and smartphones are seen in front of the words "Artificial Intelligence AI" in this illustration taken, February 19, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

A potential artificial intelligence bubble will deflate faster than past tech cycles but give way to an even stronger rebound as corporate adoption catches up with infrastructure spending, the head of Japanese IT company NTT DATA Inc. said.

Despite worries around supply chains, the direction of travel is clear, CEO Abhijit Dubey said in an interview with the Reuters Global Markets Forum.

"There is absolutely no doubt that in the medium- to long-term, AI is a massive secular trend," he said.

"Over the next 12 months, I think we're going to have a bit of a normalization ... It'll be a short-lived bubble, and (AI) will come out of it stronger."

With demand for compute still running ahead of supply, "supply chains are almost spoken for" over the next two to three years, he said. Pricing power is already tilting toward chipmakers and hyperscalers, mirroring their stretched valuations in public markets, he added.

AI has triggered the biggest technological shake-up since the advent of the internet, fueling trillions of dollars of investment and eye-watering equity gains. But it has caused shortages of memory chips, drawn regulatory scrutiny, and created growing unease over the future of work.

Dubey, who is also the firm's chief AI officer, said his company has begun rethinking recruitment strategies as AI reshapes labor markets.

"There will clearly be an impact ... Over a five- to 25-year horizon, there will likely be dislocation," he said. However, he added that NTT DATA continues to hire across locations.

Speakers at the Reuters NEXT conference in New York discussed how AI may upend work and job growth.

AI startup Writer Inc.'s CEO May Habib said customers are focused on slowing headcount growth.

"You close a customer, you get on the phone with the CEO to kick off the project, and it's like, 'Great, how soon can I whack 30% of my team?'," she said.

Still, a PwC survey of the global workforce released in November suggests the reality of generative AI usage has yet to match boardroom expectations.

Daily use of GenAI remains "significantly lower" than widely touted by executives, PwC said, even as workers with AI skills commanded an average wage premium of 56% — more than double last year's figure.

PwC also flagged a widening skills gap, with about half of non-managers reporting access to training resources, compared with roughly three-quarters of senior executives.