Latest news with #杭州


South China Morning Post
04-07-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
DeepSeek's LinkedIn AI job listings show hunger for international Chinese talent
Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) start-up DeepSeek has posted a flurry of new job openings on the professional networking site LinkedIn over the past week, coinciding with Meta Platforms ' aggressive hiring blitz amid an intensifying global race for AI talent. Advertisement The Hangzhou-based company listed 10 new positions online, including two internships focused on large language models. Other roles include deep learning researchers, core systems engineers, front-end developers and full-stack engineers, based in either Hangzhou or Beijing. The job descriptions were all in Chinese, and the company highlighted its competitive edge from 'top-tier GPU [graphics processing unit] clusters and rapid experimental iteration on potential ideas'. Recruits would 'collaborate with team members who excel at both research and engineering, focusing on AGI [artificial general intelligence] that balances practical results and academic depth', according to the listings. Microsoft-owned LinkedIn has largely withdrawn from mainland China , suggesting DeepSeek is hungry for Chinese talent overseas. The start-up has also been actively posting roles on its official website and Boss Zhipin, a Chinese job board. As of this week, 18 roles were listed on the company's own site, including positions marked 'urgent' in AGI research and core engineering. Other listings were for lawyers, a chief financial officer, a chief operating officer, and human resources personnel. On Boss Zhipin, DeepSeek had more than 40 listings, with top salaries reaching 90,000 yuan (US$12,560) per month and annual bonuses equivalent to two months' pay. Advertisement Anticipation for DeepSeek's next-generation models has been high, but so far only incremental updates have been released.


South China Morning Post
29-05-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
DeepSeek quietly updates R1 AI model amid anticipation for next-gen tech
Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) start-up DeepSeek quietly released a new version of its R1 reasoning model on Wednesday, marking its first revision since its high-profile debut in January. The Hangzhou-based company said it had 'completed a minor update to the R1 model', which is now available on the website for its namesake chatbot, as well as its mobile apps, according to a notice posted in a company-run WeChat group chat. DeepSeek did not disclose details of the changes in the update, dubbed R1-0528, which is now live on the open-source AI platform Hugging Face. DeepSeek did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The company last updated its foundational large language model V3 in March, touting improvements in coding and writing in the V3-0324 release on Hugging Face.