
As US and China dominate AI race, where is Europe's answer to DeepSeek and ChatGPT?
Europe has trailed the US and China in the AI race, and the rise of
DeepSeek has only widened the gap, but open-source projects and regulatory efforts could help the continent carve its own path in artificial intelligence, according to tech experts.
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Hangzhou-based start-up DeepSeek made headlines last month with two large language models – V3 and R1 – that have emerged as challengers to OpenAI's ChatGPT while requiring only a fraction of the cost and computing power to build.
This has put China in a strong position in its
AI rivalry with the United States and fuelled hopes for more
DeepSeek-style disrupters
But European tech firms have not yet produced an AI contender on the level of ChatGPT or DeepSeek.
Neil Lawrence, a senior AI fellow at the London-based Alan Turing Institute, noted that Britain was 'a long way behind' the US and China in both the development and deployment of the technology.
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'Similar applies to most of Europe, but there are encouraging signs in Germany, France, Finland and Switzerland,' Lawrence said.
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