Tag: model

  • Florida’s move from 2000s vexation to 2020s role model a blueprint for Arizona, lawmakers say

    Florida’s move from 2000s vexation to 2020s role model a blueprint for Arizona, lawmakers say

    The 2000 presidential election was held up for weeks due to snafus across the state of Florida, and ultimately ended in a Supreme Court ruling effectively deciding that Texas Gov. George W. Bush would be named the victor.

    In recent Arizona elections, voters and Republican politicians have complained of similarly grueling canvassing, wait times, alleged technical difficulties and a generally drawn-out process.

    “How is it that Florida can have their results at 8:00 at night, and Arizona is the last in the country to report the electoral votes?” State Senate President Warren Petersen, R-Gilbert, asked.

    Petersen said that Arizona hopes to learn from Florida’s failures, and how it went from an unwittingly tardy linchpin in a historically narrow election to a well-oiled machine that counts 11 million votes more quickly than some smaller states.

    AZ SENATE LEADER URGES BURGUM TO REVERSE OBAMA-BIDEN LAND GRAB AT URANIUM SITES

    Petersen referenced what he called the “Florida model” that now restricts “late early” ballot drop-offs at county recorders’ offices – as Grand Canyon State voters could do so on Election Day while Floridians have only until the Friday before.

    Tabulations of ballots will also occur on-site at offices, and address verification would occur every two to four years depending on the size of the Arizona county, he said.

    Petersen said that such changes are necessary to restore public trust in the election process; something both states have historically struggled with.

    In 2000, Bush supporters and conservative activists staged what became known as the “Brooks Brothers Riot” in Miami.

    Longtime Republican consultant Roger Stone had reportedly help organize the group of well-coiffed protesters to converge on Miami-Dade County’s election office in hopes of halting the disputed ballot tabulations.

    Bush later dubbed one participating lawmaker, then-Rep. John Sweeney, R-N.Y., “Congressman Kick-Ass” for his voraciousness that evening.

    In Arizona in recent elections, right-wing activists, including commentator Alex Jones, converged on Phoenix election sites chanting, “1776” and demanding better oversight of the ballot count after allegations flew regarding problems with the long-winded canvassing.

    Arizona Democrats, however, appear opposed to Republicans’ reform bill, claiming potential disenfranchisement among other critiques.

    Gov. Katie Hobbs said that legislators are “attempting to jam through a partisan bill that guts vote-by-mail and makes it harder to vote.”

    NYC COUNCIL MODERATES THRILLED WITH HOMAN MEETING

    “I offered common sense compromises to count votes faster, and they were rejected. I refuse to let extremists make it harder for Arizonans to vote.”

    State Sen. T.J. Shope, R-Coolidge, disagreed, saying on X that he has voted early every election since turning 18 and finds no such issues with the legislation.

    “I’ve read this bill over and over again and fail to understand how it ‘guts vote by mail and makes it harder to vote,’ Shope said. “There’s literally nothing in the bill that makes it harder to vote. Sign the Bill.”

    Christian Slater, a spokesperson for Hobbs, also criticized AZGOP Chair Gina Swoboda over the legislation, saying the administration tried to “negotiat[e] in good faith,” but that Republicans “refused common sense compromises to protect voting rights.”

    Former Rep. Debbie Lesko, R-Ariz., who retired from Congress to pursue a seat on the county board in Phoenix, said she supports the legislation, particularly from the vantage of her new role.

    “As a Maricopa County supervisor, I know this legislation will help instill more confidence in our elections process,” Lesko said in a statement.

    “Governor Hobbs should sign this bill – it’s the right thing to do for the future of Arizona elections.”

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    Maricopa County – home to nearly two-thirds of the state’s population – would, under the legislation, see its early-vote deadline be set Friday evening prior to election day.

    In the other 14 counties, voters who choose to “late early” vote would be required to show ID to county staff – so recorders could skip the time-consuming verification process that can delay the final count.

    To push back on allegations of disenfranchisement, the bill would also provide for three days of early in-person voting running up to Election Day proper.

    One of Lesko’s counterparts on the Maricopa board said the measure appears nonpartisan.

    “This carefully crafted … legislation is a commonsense solution that ensures election integrity while expanding access by adding two extra days to an already nearly month-long early voting period,” said Supervisor Mark Stewart.

  • Alibaba releases AI model it says rivals DeepSeek, OpenAI, Meta’s top models

    Alibaba releases AI model it says rivals DeepSeek, OpenAI, Meta’s top models

    Chinese tech giant Alibaba is flexing its muscles in the global race for artificial intelligence (AI) dominance, claiming the latest version of its Qwen 2.5 can take on the top models from rivals both foreign and domestic.

    Not to be outdone by the attention surrounding fellow Chinese firm DeepSeek – which rocked the U.S. tech sector this week with its purported emergence as a potential rival to leading American AI companies – Alibaba says its latest offering is superior to them all in nearly every measure.

    Alibaba claimed the latest version of its Qwen 2.5 can take on the top models from rivals both foreign and domestic. (Thomas Peter / Reuters Photos)

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    “Qwen 2.5-Max outperforms… almost across the board GPT-4o, DeepSeek-V3 and Llama-3.1-405B,” Alibaba’s cloud unit said in an announcement posted on its official WeChat account, referring to OpenAI and Meta’s most advanced open-source AI models.

    TECH MOGUL DOUBTS DEEPSEEK CLAIMS, SAYS US MEDIA FELL FOR ‘CCP PROPAGANDA’

    Alibaba’s Qwen account on X posted stats indicating how the model stacks up against its competitors, claiming, “It achieves competitive performance against the top-tier models, and outcompetes DeepSeek V3 in benchmarks like Arena Hard, LiveBench, LiveCodeBench, GPQA-Diamond.”

    The unusual timing of the Qwen 2.5-Max’s release, on the first day of the Lunar New Year when most Chinese people are off work and with their families, points to the pressure Chinese AI startup DeepSeek’s meteoric rise in the past three weeks has placed on not just overseas rivals, but also its domestic competition.

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    The Jan. 10 release of DeepSeek’s AI assistant, powered by the DeepSeek-V3 model, as well as the Jan. 20 release of its R1 model, has shocked Silicon Valley and caused tech shares to plunge, with the Chinese startup’s purportedly low development and usage costs prompting investors to question huge spending plans by leading AI firms in the U.S.

    But DeepSeek’s success has also led to a scramble among its domestic competitors to upgrade their own AI models.

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    Two days after the release of DeepSeek-R1, TikTok owner ByteDance released an update to its flagship AI model, which it claimed outperformed Microsoft-backed OpenAI’s o1 in AIME, a benchmark test that measures how well AI models understand and respond to complex instructions.

    This echoed DeepSeek’s claim that its R1 model rivaled OpenAI’s o1 on several performance benchmarks.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

  • Chinese app DeepSeek hammers US tech stocks with cheaper open-source AI model

    Chinese app DeepSeek hammers US tech stocks with cheaper open-source AI model

    Chinese AI startup DeepSeek is gaining attention in Silicon Valley as the company appears to be nearly matching the capability of chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, but at a fraction of the development cost.

    DeepSeek has surged in popularity in global app stores since the app was released earlier this month, having been downloaded1.6 million times by Jan. 25 in the U.S. and ranking No. 1 in iPhone app stores in Australia, Canada, China, Singapore, the U.S. and the U.K. Unlike ChatGPT and other major AI competitors, DeepSeek is open-source, allowing developers to offer their own improvements on the software.

    The company unveiled R1, a specialized model designed for complex problem-solving, on Jan. 20, which “zoomed to the global top 10 in performance,” and was built far more rapidly, with fewer, less powerful AI chips, at a much lower cost than other U.S. models, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    Meta’s Chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, took to social media to speak about the app and its rapid success.

    AI WILL BE THE MAJOR FOCUS AT LAS VEGAS CONSUMER ELECTRONICS SHOW

    A chatbot app developed by the Chinese AI company DeepSeek (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    He pointed out in a post on Threads, that what stuck out to him most about DeepSeek’s success was not the heightened threat created by Chinese competition, but the value of keeping AI models open source, so anyone could benefit. 

    “It’s not that China’s AI is ‘surpassing the US,’ but rather that ‘open source models are surpassing proprietary ones,’” LeCun explained.

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    The new potential of open source AI development caused waves in the stock market, causing some traders to sell off shares in companies like Nvidia, which develops the computer chips typically necessary for brute-force AI training.

    OpenAI ChatGPT

    In this photo illustration, the OpenAI logo is seen displayed on a mobile phone screen with ChatGPT logo in the background.  (Photo Illustration by Idrees Abbas/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Experts told the Journal that DeepSeek’s technology is still behind OpenAI and Google. However, it is a close rival despite using fewer and less-advanced chips, and in some cases skipping steps that U.S. developers consider essential.

    As of Saturday, the Journal reported that the two models of DeepSeek were ranked in the top 10 on Chatbot Arena, a platform hosted by University of California, Berkeley researchers that rates chatbot performance.

    Meta headquarters

    Signage outside Meta headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2024.  (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

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    While DeepSeek’s flagship model is free, the Journal reported that the company charges users who connect their own applications to DeepSeek’s model and computing infrastructure.

    Fox Business’ Stepheny Price contributed to this report

  • Chinese app DeepSeek hammers US tech stocks with cheaper open-source AI model

    China AI model wowing Silicon Valley

    A Chinese AI company that rivals ChatGPT, is gaining attention in Silicon Valley with its rapid rise, nearly outperforming leading American AI companies like OpenAI and Meta. 

    DeepSeek is a Chinese AI startup that develops open-source large language models (LLMs), according to the company’s website. 

    The company unveiled R1, a specialized model designed for complex problem-solving, on Jan. 20, which “zoomed to the global top 10 in performance,” and was built far more rapidly, with fewer, less powerful AI chips, at a much lower cost than other U.S. models, according to the Wall Street Journal.

    The announcement of the latest version of the app happened on President Donald Trump’s Inauguration Day as another Chinese-owned social media app, TikTok, was making headlines about whether it would be banned in the U.S. 

    TIKTOK SHOUTS OUT TRUMP AS APP GOES DARK FOR MILLIONS OF USERS ACROSS US

    A chatbot app developed by the Chinese AI company DeepSeek. (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    Meta’s Chief AI scientist, Yann LeCun, took to social media to speak about the app and it’s rapid success.

    He pointed out in a post on Threads, that what stuck out to him most about DeepSeek’s success was not the heightened threat created by Chinese competition, but the value of keeping AI models open source, so anyone could benefit. 

    “It’s not that China’s AI is ‘surpassing the US,’ but rather that ‘open source models are surpassing proprietary ones,’” LeCun explained. 

    “DeepSeek has profited from open research and open source (e.g. PyTorch and Llama from Meta) They came up with new ideas and built them on top of other people’s work,” LeCun continued. “Because their work is published and open source, everyone can profit from it. That is the power of open research and open source.”

    Just days after the release of the latest version of DeepSeek, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg announced his company was planning on spending over $60 billion in 2025 as it remains steadfast on AI. 

    Meta’s latest move aims to bolster the company’s position against rivals OpenAI and Google in the race to dominate AI.

    Big Tech firms have been investing tens of billions of dollars to develop AI infrastructure after the success of OpenAI’s ChatGPT. 

    Meta’s announcement came just days after Trump announced that OpenAI, SoftBank and Oracle will form a venture called Stargate and invest $500 billion in AI infrastructure across the U.S.

    “Deepseek R1 is one of the most amazing and impressive breakthroughs I’ve ever seen,” Marc Andreessen, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist who has been advising Trump, wrote in a post on X. “And as open source, a profound gift to the world.” 

    AI WILL BE THE MAJOR FOCUS AT LAS VEGAS CONSUMER ELECTRONICS SHOW

    “DeepSeek R1 is AI’s Sputnik moment,” Andreessen wrote in a comment. 

    Alexandr Wang, CEO at Scale AI, a San Francisco-based software company, also spoke out on the technology and said DeepSeek’s quick success is a “wake-up call for America.”

    “DeepSeek is a wake up call for America, but it doesn’t change the strategy,” Wang wrote in a post on X. 

    Wang explained that the “USA must out-innovate & race faster, as we have done in the entire history of AI” and “tighten export controls on chips so that we can maintain future leads.”

    “Every major breakthrough in AI has been American,” Wang said. 

    OPENAI CEO SAM ALTMAN RINGS IN 2025 WITH CRYPTIC, CONCERNING TWEET ABOUT AI’S FUTURE

    ChatGPT AI Photo Illustration

    The ChatGPT logo appears on a smartphone screen in this illustration photo in Reno, United States, on January 3, 2025.  (Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via Getty Images / Getty Images)

    DeepSeek’s development was led by a Chinese hedge-fund manager, Liang Wenfeng, who has become the face of the country’s AI push, the Journal wrote. 

    Experts told the Journal that DeepSeek’s technology is still behind OpenAI and Google. However, it is a close rival despite using fewer and less-advanced chips, and in some cases skipping steps that U.S. developers consider essential.

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    As of Saturday, the Journal reported that the two models of DeepSeek were ranked in the top 10 on Chatbot Arena, a platform hosted by University of California, Berkeley researchers that rates chatbot performance.

    While DeepSeek’s flagship model is free, the Journal reported that the company charges users who connect their own applications to DeepSeek’s model and computing infrastructure.

    FOX Business’ Breck Dumas and Reuters contributed to this report. 

  • GOP lawmaker rolls out MERIT Act to restructure federal workforce based on private sector model

    GOP lawmaker rolls out MERIT Act to restructure federal workforce based on private sector model

    FIRST ON FOX: Rep. Barry Loudermilk rolled out a measure Thursday that would reform and restructure the federal workforce by focusing on hiring and retaining officials on a merit basis, modeling employee dismissal with that of the private sector, Fox News Digital has learned. 

    Loudermilk, R-Ga., re-introduced the Modern Employment Reform, Improvement and Transformation (MERIT) Act on Thursday in an effort to hold “inefficient, corrupt government bureaucrats accountable.” 

    WHITE HOUSE OPM ORDERS ALL DEI OFFICES TO BEGIN CLOSING BY END OF DAY WEDNESDAY

    The rollout comes after President Donald Trump signed several Day One executive actions focused on reforming the federal workforce. 

    “Over the past four years, most Americans feared the federal government and its ability to unjustly wield power and have become tired of funding the fraud, waste, and abuse within our bloated federal bureaucracy,” Loudermilk told Fox News Digital. “With President Trump back in office, and the passage of my MERIT Act, Americans will have a government they can be proud of again, not one they fear and distrust.” 

    Loudermilk says he intends to “return our government to one that works for the people, not one that works for self-interests or political agendas.”  

    Rep. Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga., chairs the House Administration Committee Subcommittee on Oversight hearing on “Oversight of the U.S. Capitol Police Office of Inspector General” on Wednesday, July 19, 2023. (Getty Images )

    The bill would address misconduct and poor performance by repealing the Chapter 43 special process for action against poor performers and bad actors, which Loudermilk said is “unnecessarily time-consuming,” and instead, streamlines the Chapter 75 process for removal or suspension of employees and supervisors. 

    The bill also permits agencies to remove a senior executive from the civil service for performance reasons, rather than merely demoting the individual to a non-Senior Executive Service (SES) position. 

    The MERIT Act also authorizes agencies to order recoupment of bonuses and awards when performance or conduct issues are discovered and it is determined the bonus or award would not have been paid had those issues been known at the time. 

    The bill also affects the retirement benefits of employees who are removed based on a felony conviction for actions taken in furtherance of official duties. The period of service during which the felonious activities occurred will be eliminated for purposes of any annuity computation under the bill.

    “The reforming of the federal government must begin with a dedicated, efficient, and committed workforce, which is why the MERIT Act is an essential step in fixing our broken system,” Loudermilk said. “Our federal employment system should reward hard work and dedication; however, the current federal employment code protects poor performers and corruption.” 

    Trump speaks

    President Trump gives his second presidential inaugural address on Jan. 20, 2024. (Fox News)

    Loudermilk said he has been working on the bill for “several years” and that “now is the time to reform our outdated system.” 

    “MERIT would create a more efficient and effective government that works for the benefit of the American people,” he said. “It would restructure the federal employment code by modeling employee dismissal with that of the private sector, and lessen the time it takes to root out misconduct and poor performers.” 

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    Loudermilk told Fox News Digital he is “encouraged” that Trump and Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) will “complement MERIT.” 

    “I look forward to working with them and my colleagues to get it passed in the U.S. House,” Loudermilk said. 

    The bill’s original co-sponsors are Reps. Buddy Carter, Mike Collins, Erin Houchin, Burgess Owens, Anna Paulina Luna, Scott Franklin, Dan Webster, Tracy Mann, Dan Meuser, Brian Babin, Claudia Tenney, Jim Baird, Greg Steube and Tim Burchett. 

    TRUMP TO TAKE MORE THAN 200 EXECUTIVE ACTIONS ON DAY 1

    The rollout of the legislation comes as Trump has already taken steps to reform the workforce during his first week in office. 

    Trump directed all agencies and departments to close their Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) offices by Wednesday evening and place all DEI office employees on paid administrative leave. 

    Trump issued two other executive actions on Tuesday targeting DEI: An executive order to end discrimination in the workplace and higher education through race- and sex-based preferences under the guise of DEI, and a memo to eliminate a Biden administration policy that prioritized DEI hiring at the Federal Aviation Administration.

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    By the end of the day Friday, Trump ordered all agency and department heads to notify their workforce of a return to in-person, in-office work. The White House has recommended a target return-to-work start date for 30 days from the original notice.