Security

Cyber-crime

DeepSeek limits new accounts amid cyberattack

Chinese AI startup grapples with consequences of sudden popularity


Updated China's DeepSeek, which shook up American AI makers with the debut of its V3 and reasoning-capable R1 LLM families, has limited new signups to its web-based interface to its models due to what's said to be an ongoing cyberattack.

"Due to large-scale malicious attacks on DeepSeek's services, we are temporarily limiting registrations to ensure continued service," the biz said in a note on its status page. "Existing users can log in as usual. Thanks for your understanding and support."

The incident appears to have begun around 2133 China Standard Time (CST) on Monday, January 27, or around 0533 PST here on the US West Coast ‒ and was ongoing at the time this article was filed. Sign-ups and logins via Google's single-sign-on appeared to be working at 1030 PST.

DeekSeek did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The outfit's AI app for iOS, DeepSeek – AI Assistant, is presently the top free download in Apple's US App store, just above OpenAI's ChatGPT.

The Chinese AI firm released DeepSeek R1 as an open source LLM last week, following its parent V3 model, claiming reasoning capabilities that rival OpenAI's GPT-o1 in a number of benchmarks.

Both can be used locally or via the web or DeepSeek's apps for free, or cloud API, though as stated above, signups for the web chatbot interface at least have been limited. Bear in mind, if you use R1 or V3 using DeepSeek's online services, such as the web or app, your conversations and data are stored in China.

Having allegedly built V3 using just $5.58 million [PDF], significantly less than Western AI firms, investors in companies like Nvidia have begun to wonder whether they need to revise their financial assumptions. The result has been a selloff in AI stocks.

The viability of open source models has long been a concern among commercial AI firms with proprietary models. AI skeptics such as Gary Marcus have previously questioned the valuation of firms like OpenAI when corporations like Meta have been giving away open source models, namely Llama, at no charge.

We will update this story as it develops. ®

Updated to add at 1030 PST, 1830 UTC

As noted above, you may be able to login at least with a Google account by now, or you may be able to get through with a regular account. Also, DeepSeek has released a family of openly available models called Janus Pro that it claims can beat OpenAI's DALL-E 3 image generator in benchmarks.

Send us news
43 Comments

How nice that state-of-the-art LLMs reveal their reasoning ... for miscreants to exploit

Blueprints shared for jail-breaking models that expose their chain-of-thought process

Microsoft warns Trump: Where the US won't sell AI tech, China will

Rule hamstringing our datacenters is 'gift' to Middle Kingdom, vice chair argues

UK's new thinking on AI: Unless it's causing serious bother, you can crack on

Plus: Keep calm and plug Anthropic's Claude into public services

We meet the protesters who want to ban Artificial General Intelligence before it even exists

STOP AI warns of doomsday scenario, demands governments pull the plug on advanced models

Does terrible code drive you mad? Wait until you see what it does to OpenAI's GPT-4o

Model was fine-tuned to write vulnerable software – then suggested enslaving humanity

Microsoft expands Copilot bug bounty targets, adds payouts for even moderate messes

Said bugs 'can have significant implications' – glad to hear that from Redmond

LLM aka Large Legal Mess: Judge wants lawyer fined $15K for using AI slop in filing

Plus: Anthropic rolls out Claude 3.7 Sonnet

Despite Wall Street jitters, AI hopefuls keep spending billions on AI infrastructure

Sunk cost fallacy? No, I just need a little more cash for this AGI thing I’ve been working on

Why AI benchmarks suck

Anyone remember when Volkswagen rigged its emissions results? Oh...

India's top telco plans cloud PCs for its 475 million subscribers

PLUS: China bans AI leaders from visiting USA; Acer data leak suspect cuffed; and more

Microsoft names alleged credential-snatching 'Azure Abuse Enterprise' operators

Crew helped lowlifes generate X-rated celeb deepfakes using Redmond's OpenAI-powered cloud – claim

Three charged in Singapore with alleged link to illicit shipments of Nvidia GPUs to China

Accused face up to 20 years in prison