DeepSeek chatbot service restored after 12-hour outage

Hangzhou-based AI startup DeepSeek restored its chatbot service on Monday morning after a 12-hour outage that affected millions of users. The disruption started Sunday evening, leading to complaints flooding Chinese social media platforms. The company published maintenance records showing fixes issued overnight.

The Hangzhou-based AI lab DeepSeek saw its namesake chatbot website and app go offline from Sunday evening, according to service maintenance records the company published online.

The company issued fixes between 1am and 9am on Monday. South China Morning Post confirmed the service was restored by 9.13am. DeepSeek noted at the time that “a fix” had been implemented and it was continuing to monitor results. By 10.33am, the records marked the outage as “resolved already”.

Chinese social media platforms were flooded with complaints from users across the country about the breakdown. Keywords reference denial-of-service and DDoS, though the company did not specify the cause in its records. Rivals including Zhipu AI, MiniMax AI, and Moonshot AI gained ground amid the disruption.

The outage affected millions and underscores reliability issues in China's competitive AI sector.

Mga Kaugnay na Artikulo

Illustration of frustrated office workers during a ChatGPT service outage on Wednesday afternoon.
Larawang ginawa ng AI

ChatGPT outage briefly disrupts service for users

Iniulat ng AI Larawang ginawa ng AI

OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot experienced a temporary outage on Wednesday afternoon, leaving some users unable to access the service.

Bluesky faced intermittent service disruptions on Monday, which the company attributed to an upstream service provider. Many users quickly blamed the issues on developers' use of AI-assisted 'vibe coding' tools. The outage sparked widespread memes and criticism on the platform.

Iniulat ng AI

This month in China, people have queued on streets to install the AI agent OpenClaw on their computers. Some travelled from other cities, others waited hours for engineers to set it up, and 'birth certificates' were issued upon installation. The frenzy highlights enthusiasm for AI agents.

Tencent’s cloud unit launched ClawPro in public beta on Thursday, an AI agent management platform for enterprises to deploy OpenClaw templates, select models and agents, track token consumption, and manage security. The company said firms can deploy it in just 10 minutes without specialised technical support.

Iniulat ng AI

Despite a hot domestic market, South Korean investors have increased purchases on Hong Kong and mainland exchanges this year. Data shows they bought US$507 million in Hong Kong-listed shares and US$154 million in mainland-listed shares, focusing heavily on AI and semiconductor names.

Former OpenAI executive Zack Kass says Chinese enterprises lag behind US peers in AI adoption due to rigid corporate hierarchies, despite tech-savvy consumers. In a recent interview with the South China Morning Post, he described China as having a 'techno-centric consumer' and the US a 'techno-centric enterprise'. Kass said this cultural divergence explains the frenzy around OpenClaw in China, even as it struggles for scale in the US.

Gumagamit ng cookies ang website na ito

Gumagamit kami ng cookies para sa analytics upang mapabuti ang aming site. Basahin ang aming patakaran sa privacy para sa higit pang impormasyon.
Tanggihan