- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
Pros:
- Completely free
- Affordable API access for developers and researchers
Cons:
- Doesn’t keep your data safe
- Occasionally incorrect
- No deep research, image generation, or voice mode features
- Slow responses
- Obvious censorship
Use Ollama to run deepseek locally. No censorship, no data leakage, can be run without network connectivity.
No, DeepSeek isn’t uncensored if you run it locally
There’s an idea floating around that DeepSeek’s well-documented censorship only exists at its application layer but goes away if you run it locally (that means downloading its AI model to your computer). But DeepSeek’s censorship is baked-in, according to a Wired investigation which found that the model is censored on both the application and training levels […]
Addition:
DeepSeek’s updated R1 AI model is more censored, test finds
Clément Delangue, the CEO of AI dev platform Hugging Face, warned about the unintended consequences of Western companies building on top of well-performing, openly licensed Chinese AI.
Mr McCarthy, does this version of DeepSeek - named after a blatant pro-America virtue signal - suffice to be adequately American enough for you
When I asked about Tiananmen Square events it answered with a correct historical context. Or who looks like Winnie the Poo. Haven’t used the app but colleagues that tried found it censored. Not sure those “journalists” did any actual investigation.
You can find it out yourself. Download ollama and deepseek locally, turn off network connectivity and ask it about Tiananmen or other potentially censored information.
https://interconnect.substack.com/p/was-zuck-right-about-chinese-ai-models