You can try DeepSeek’s R1 through Perplexity—without the security risk

The AI search firm Perplexity routinely lets users try out state-of-the-art large language models on its site, but the company moved quickly to put Chinese company DeepSeek’s new R1 model front and center in its user interface. That offers users a chance to find out what the buzz is all about, without sending their data through the DeepSeek app, which is hosted in China

While some AI thought leaders such as Thrive Capital’s Josh Kushner, Scale AI’s Alexander Wang, and Anduril’s Palmer Luckey hurried to debunk or downplay DeepSeek’s achievements, Perplexity’s CEO Aravind Srinivas believes the Chinese company’s models are something special. “In the past few years, there have been a handful of revolutionary moments in AI that have transformed the landscape,” Perplexity cofounder and CEO Aravind Srinivas wrote in a subscriber email Tuesday. “I wholeheartedly believe that this is yet another moment.” 

Users of Perplexity’s free and premium tiers  can now choose to use DeepSeek via a menu button within the search bar. (Users can also select OpenAI’s o3 mini model.) “It’s one of the core models,” says Perplexity chief business officer Dmitry Shevelenko. “And what’s really neat about it is we’ve also developed a user interface . . .  where you can actually see the chain of thought, so you can actually see how the model is thinking in real time, and that’s something that was never possible before.”

Because DeepSeek operates within the People’s Republic of China’s regulatory framework, the company had to prevent its models from talking about politically sensitive topics, such as the Tiananmen Square protests. Perplexity was able to remove those guardrails from the open-source version of DeepSeek-R1.

Perplexity also says any user data shared with the chatbot stays with the company’s servers in the U.S. and Canada; nothing is shared with DeepSeek or China. 

Of the models available on Perplexity, DeepSeek R1 is unique in that it shows the “chain of thought” the LLM followed to reach an answer. Some of the innovations the DeepSeek researchers put into its models were driven by a need to economize on computing power. The company said it trained its models, for example, using less-powerful Nvidia H800 chips after the U.S. chip bans cut off access to Nvidia’s most powerful GPUs. The end result was the creation of models that show state-of-the-art intelligence while requiring far less computing power than comparable models to run. 

That’s good for Perplexity. “There are efficiencies,” says Shevelenko. “I mean, I think we’re still too early to know the exact inference cost breakdown, but just the fact that it’s open-source and you’re not paying the private model provider, that’s already the major efficiency.”

https://www.fastcompany.com/91272776/you-can-try-deepseeks-r1-through-perplexity-without-the-security-risk?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Creată 4h | 5 feb. 2025, 00:50:07


Autentifică-te pentru a adăuga comentarii

Alte posturi din acest grup

Robinhood halts Super Bowl betting contracts after CFTC request

Robinhood said on Tuesday it is rolling back the event contracts that would let users bet on the result of the

5 feb. 2025, 00:50:09 | Fast company - tech
The value of Trump’s memecoin has dropped more than 75% since inauguration

Donald Trump drew plenty of criticism by launching his own branded memecoin three days before his

5 feb. 2025, 00:50:08 | Fast company - tech
What’s behind Nintendo’s 42% drop in profits?

Nintendo’s profits tumbled as sales of its Switch console lost momentum, prompting the

4 feb. 2025, 18:10:05 | Fast company - tech
‘I would love to share affection and attention’: This Facebook group connect families with surrogate grandparents

“We want grandparents who want to have pizza nights with us, attend baseball and basketball games, have ice cream dates, take bike rides, just genuinely have fun with us and our boys,” reads one p

4 feb. 2025, 18:10:04 | Fast company - tech
Apple launches Invites, its event invitation app that takes on Partiful

Apple rolled out its newest iPhone app called Invites, which lets iCloud+ subs

4 feb. 2025, 18:10:03 | Fast company - tech
Children’s reading levels are plummeting. Is tech to blame?

In the history of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), eighth-grade reading scores have never been this low.

According to

4 feb. 2025, 13:30:05 | Fast company - tech
Twitch has plenty of competition in the livestream economy. CEO Dan Clancy isn’t worried

Business leaders are often reluctant to speak about their competition. It’s rare that you’ll hear Netflix’s Ted Sarandos talk about Disney+, or Skims’s Jens Grede speak about Span

4 feb. 2025, 13:30:03 | Fast company - tech