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Microsoft employees aren’t allowed to use DeepSeek due to data security and propaganda concerns, Microsoft Vice Chairman and ...
From backing OpenAI to embracing a Chinese rival, Satya Nadella is flipping the script on the trillion-dollar AI war ...
Microsoft joins countries like Italy and Taiwan, and agencies like the U.S. Navy, Congress, Pentagon, and NASA in banning ...
Even though Microsoft has these concerns about DeepSeek, here’s the twist: earlier this year, the company did offer DeepSeek’s R1 model on its Azure cloud service. It wasn’t a full ban ...
In a Senate hearing addressing US AI capabilities, Vice Chair and President of Microsoft Brad Smith has revealed the company's employees are not permitted to use the DeepSeek app. Citing data ...
Interestingly, Microsoft had previously allowed one of DeepSeek’s open-source models DeepSeek R1 to be used on its Azure cloud platform. But that was only for testing in a controlled setting ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Microsoft does not allow its employees to use an artificial intelligence app developed by Chinese AI startup Deepseek, due to concerns related to data vulnerability as well ...
Equally impressive is DeepSeek’s R1 “reasoning” model ... for Nvidia because they need so much more compute. In May, Microsoft Vice Chairman and President Brad Smith said in a Senate ...