Perplexity also has a Deep Research tool now,provocative eroticism power and it's powered by a version of DeepSeek R1.
According to the announcement, the AI search engine's new tool does "in-depth research and analysis on your behalf," by crawling the web and compiles a comprehensive report of its findings. If Deep Research sounds familiar, that's because Google and OpenAI both have their own versions of the research tool for Gemini and ChatGPT respectively — yes, they're both also called Deep Research. XAI's new Grok 3 took some creative liberties and called its research tool Deepsearch.
But while Google, OpenAI and xAI's research tools rely on their own proprietary models, Perplexity uses a customized version of the open-source DeepSeek R1. Perplexity CEO Aravind Srinivas confirmed this in a follow-up to a Feb. 3 post on X saying, "can easily enable something like Deep Research at 10-100x lower pricing, using a custom version of R1." About a week later Srinivas indicated that this is what Perplexity did by reposting replying, "done" with a checkmark emoji.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Perplexity is offering Deep Research free of charge for its users — with limitations. Non-paying Perplexity users get free access to "limited number of answers per day," and paying subscribers get unlimited access as part of the $20 a month Pro plan. This is different from Google Gemini, ChatGPT, and Grok 3 which only offer their research tools to paying users.
While Perplexity based its Deep Research off of DeepSeek's R1 model, because R1 is open-source, it means that programmers can tweak and customize it for their own purposes. Last week, Perplexity introduced its own open-source version of R1, called R1 1776, "that has been post-trained to provide uncensored, unbiased, and factual information." This is a direct response to claims that the original R1 censors responses criticizing the Chinese government.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
But Perplexity Deep Research is not without flaws. Decoder discovered that the tool inaccurately attributed the term "stochastic parrots" to AI researcher Gary Marcus, when in fact it was coined by Emily M. Bender in a research paper. Users have also noted that Perplexity Deep Research gives outdated and inaccurate data, which is a problem since the company has touted it as tool for investment and market analysis. Srinivas said in an X post that they're addressing the issues, adding "for finance specifically, data accuracy is a must and high stakes."
But it just goes to show that hallucination for all LLMs is a persistent problem that might not ever go away, so use with caution.
Topics Artificial Intelligence DeepSeek
Thank you, Ms. Monopoly, you toppled the patriarchy!!!!!! (Just kidding)Here's what the new Apple Watch Series 5 looks likeMcDonald's buys voiceTeen shoots soda in her own face for pretty much no reason at allWhy I've never paid Apple store prices for an iPhone, and you shouldn’t eitherTrump capping a pen with his tiny hands gets a huge Photoshop battleTiny baby hippo takes her first dip in the poolSome evidence Trump is probably using to make his wild voter fraud caseA 'Pro' iPhone should start with more than 64GB of storageThe 'Downton Abbey' movie is the horniest PGCNBC's Trump tweet alert is a new level of absurdA 'Pro' iPhone should start with more than 64GB of storageHey Sean Spicer, what's up with that cryptic tweet?Teenage innovators are improving the bathroom selfie, one random object at a timeTrump is going to build that damn wall and all people can talk about is avocadosCabin's 'moving hotel' bus returns with more spacious sleeping spaceStellar pregnancy announcement features a dog wearing glassesJenna Fischer and Angela Kinsey team up for 'The Office' podcastLittle maestro expertly commands the band in an Istanbul subway16 times people accidentally texted their boss De Minaur vs. Djokovic 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for free Toyota China reports sales fall, pushes for restructuring · TechNode NASA spacecraft catches volcano plumes blasting into space Drone food delivery orders rise in China during Spring Festival · TechNode New US sanctions halt TSMC shipments to more mainland China chip design firms · TechNode China’s CATL files for secondary listing in Hong Kong to fund expansion · TechNode NASA rover gets blasted by solar storm on Mars, captures footage Paolini vs. Navarro 2024 livestream: Watch Wimbledon for free Astronaut snaps strange iridescent clouds at the edge of space Mars gets walloped by space rocks way more than scientists thought Best Amazon deal: Get the brand iOS 18: How to tint your apps Best early Prime Day 2 Surprise in NASA's asteroid rocks hints Bennu came from ocean world New Webb telescope image isn't just stunning. It shattered a record. BYD to recruit 20,000 factory workers in China as part of Q1 hiring spree · TechNode Unitree’s humanoid robots steal the show at 2025 CCTV Spring Festival Gala with AI NASA mission spots Chinese spacecraft on far side of the moon The best early Prime Day 2024 Bluetooth speaker deals: Bose, Sony, JBL China’s Lunar New Year box office tops $390 million on second day of holiday · TechNode
3.2781s , 10193.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【provocative eroticism power】,Evergreen Information Network