- England wing Murley out of France Six Nations clash
- Tequila maker Diageo axes sales target on Trump tariffs
- Prague museum to host first European display of 3.18 million year old Lucy
- Where things stand in China-US trade tensions
- Japan's Olympic pool-sized sinkhole highlights risk of old pipes
- At Damascus opera house, hopes for a better future
- Double Olympic champion Gu out of Asian Winter Games with injury
- Frenchman on death row in Indonesia leaves jail ahead of transfer home
- Japan PM to meet Trump on Feb 6-8 US trip
- Asian stocks and peso rise on Trump's Mexico, Canada tariff delay
- Panama lawsuit requests axing Hong Kong firm's canal concession
- Nepal hikes Everest climbing fee by a third
- OpenAI chief Altman signs deal with South Korea's Kakao after DeepSeek upset
- UBS profit beats forecast as Credit Suisse merger nears end
- Nintendo cuts net profit forecast as Switch sales slow
- Netanyahu to meet Trump as Israel, Hamas eye Gaza truce talks
- China says to probe Google over anti-monopoly violations
- China slaps tariffs on US energy, vehicles in trade war sparring
- Frenchman on death row in Indonesia to return home
- Brunson scores 42 as Knicks bounce back, Thunder rout Bucks
- China hits back at US with levies as Trump tariffs come in force
- Musk takes reins of US Treasury payments, sparking lawsuit
- DR Congo, Rwanda leaders to join summit on crisis in war-torn east
- Mahomes and Chiefs take on villain role as Super Bowl hype begins
- OpenAI chief Altman inks deal with S. Korea's Kakao after DeepSeek upset
- Syria leader heads to Turkey to discuss rebuilding, Kurds
- Paris, the village of light in Kyrgyzstan's rugged mountains
- How China could respond to Trump's new tariffs
- Trump to host Netanyahu for crucial Gaza ceasefire talks
- 'Art for everyone': Mucha's masterpiece to find home in Prague, 100 years on
- Trump halts Canada and Mexico tariffs, China still targeted
- Apple blasts porn app for iPhones in Europe
- Stocks and peso boosted by Trump's Mexico, Canada tariff delay
- France pitches AI summit as 'wake-up call' for Europe
- Hundreds march in New York against Trump's trans policy
- Lindsey Vonn: World Ski Championships throwback
- Neymar homecoming is reminder of promise unfulfilled
- Eliasch offers 'hope' and big revenue growth for IOC's 'phenomenal brand'
- Attempted murder trial of Rushdie assailant to begin
- Musk's US government 'takeover' sounds alarm bells
- Ecuadoran drug gangs turn to death saint for protection
- Women players beat the odds to cut a path for ice hockey in Iran
- In fire-ravaged Los Angeles, a long road of rebuilding
- Mallia Therapeutics and Northway Biotech Announce Partnership for the Manufacturing of Soluble CD83 Protein for Hair Loss Treatment
- Volatus Aerospace Inc. Announces a Strategic Partnership with Dufour Aerospace to Enhance Aerial Cargo, Surveillance, Inspection and Mapping Missions with Advanced VTOL Aircraft Technology
- Gaming Realms PLC Announces FY24 Pre-Close Trading Update
- Agronomics Limited Announces Net Asset Value calculation as at 31 December 2024
- IXOPAY Appoints Yasser Abou-Nasr as SVP of Product to Drive Execution and Scale
- USAID freeze calls into question billions in support for poorest countries
- PSG, Italian giants are biggest movers in Europe's winter transfer window
OpenAI chief Altman signs deal with South Korea's Kakao after DeepSeek upset
OpenAI chief Sam Altman signed a deal with tech giant Kakao in South Korea on Tuesday as the US firm seeks new alliances after Chinese rival DeepSeek shook the global AI industry.
Kakao, which owns an online bank, South Korea's largest taxi-hailing app, and a messaging service, announced a partnership allowing them to use ChatGPT for its new artificial intelligence services, joining a global alliance led by OpenAI amid intensifying competition in the sector.
"We're excited to bring advanced AI to Kakao's millions of users and work together to integrate our technology into services that transform how Kakao's users communicate and connect," said Altman.
"Kakao has a deep understanding of how technology can enrich everyday lives," he added.
Kakao's CEO Shina Chung said the company was "thrilled" to establish a strategic collaboration with OpenAI.
Altman's company is part of the Stargate drive announced by US President Donald Trump to invest up to $500 billion in AI infrastructure in the United States.
But AI newcomer DeepSeek has sent Silicon Valley into a frenzy, with some calling its high performance and supposed low cost a wake-up call for US developers.
"Highly Aware"
At a closed meeting with South Korean AI developers, Altman admitted OpenAI "hasn't found a strategy yet" to respond to DeepSeek.
When asked by an executive of Wrtn Technologies -- a Seoul-based AI firm -- about his plans for addressing the rise of open-source models such as DeepSeek, Altman said there is "definitely room for open source".
"We haven't figured out a strategy yet, but we want to do more," he added.
Altman seems "quite nervous internally but it appears OpenAI is indeed highly aware of, and influenced by, DeepSeek's impact", said Kim Jang-hyun, a data science Professor at Sungkyunkwan University..
"With South Korea being a country known for its high loyalty, frequent usage, and tech-savvy user base," OpenAI might use the country as "a testing ground before expanding globally", Kim told AFP.
Also on Altman's agenda were meetings with two top South Korean chipmakers, Samsung and SK hynix, both key suppliers of advanced semiconductors used in AI servers.
Altman met with SK Group chairman Chey Tae-won and SK hynix CEO Kwak Noh-jung in Seoul to discuss collaboration on AI memory chips, including high bandwidth memory (HBM), and AI services.
He is also expected to meet with Samsung Electronics chairman Lee Jae-yong later Tuesday.
Jaejune Kim, executive vice president of Samsung's memory business, said last week that the company was "monitoring industry trends considering various scenarios" when asked about DeepSeek.
DeepSeek's performance has sparked a wave of accusations that it has reverse-engineered the capabilities of leading US technology.
OpenAI warned last week that Chinese companies are actively attempting to replicate its advanced AI models, prompting closer cooperation with US authorities.
OpenAI says rivals are using a process known as distillation in which developers creating smaller models learn from larger ones by copying their behaviour and decision-making patterns -- similar to a student learning from a teacher.
The company is itself facing multiple accusations of intellectual property violations, primarily related to the use of copyrighted materials in training its generative AI models.
F.Bennett--AMWN