DeepSeek, the Chinese AI startup known for its DeepSeek-R1 LLM model, has publicly exposed two databases containing sensitive user and operational information.
DeepSeek, the Chinese AI startup known for its DeepSeek-R1 LLM model, has publicly exposed two databases containing sensitive user and operational information.
DeepSeek, the recently popular Chinese-made AI agent, was storing chat logs and even API keys unsafely. Cyber security researchers from Wiz noticed the external database connections, warning DeepSeek ...
The Chinese firm said training the model cost just $5.6 million. Microsoft alleges DeepSeek ‘distilled’ OpenAI’s work.
As China’s DeepSeek grabs headlines around the world for its disruptively low-cost AI, it is only natural that its models are ...
Once a developer unknowingly downloads a malicious fork, the malware in that cloned code executes and installs a backdoor on ...
As rivals search for the secret to the company’s sudden AI success, others are sounding the alarm about security concerns — ...
Lastly, based on its privacy page, DeepSeek is a privacy nightmare. It collects an absurd amount of information from its ...
Hacking units from Iran abused Gemini the most, but North Korean and Chinese groups also tried their luck. None made any ...
Google highlighted significant abuse of its Gemini LLM tool by nation state actors to support malicious activities, including ...
Aquabot, which is based on the Mirai framework, allows miscreants to remotely control infected equipment, and is built for ...
A cyber-threat report from Google is shedding light on how foreign actors are leveraging generative AI to boost their hacking ...