South Korea has reportedly blocked access for some of its ministries to Chinese start-up DeepSeek's AI models amid concerns about national security and data privacy.
Officials in South Korea and Australia have cited concerns about user data and national security as reasons to block the buzzy AI service from China.
South Korea blocks access to Chinese AI DeepSeek, citing data security risks, joining other nations in scrutiny.
DeepSeek has become one of the most downloaded apps worldwide, but some governments have security concerns. View on euronews ...
DeepSeek and US tech outlook The immediate market reaction to DeepSeek was a US$1 trillion hit in market capitalisation but ...
As DeepSeek continues to exert dominance in the global artificial intelligence space, Texas has become the latest ...
Chinese AI chatbot, 'DeepSeek' that took the American markets by storm is alleged of data collection. This has made several ...
In its privacy policy, DeepSeek acknowledged storing data on servers inside the People's Republic of China. Countries banning ...
At least three South Korean ministries have temporarily blocked employee access to Chinese artificial intelligence startup ...
A notable example is Hubei Yangtze Memory Labs in Wuhan, where many engineers from leading Chinese chipmaker YMTC, which was added to the U.S. Entity List in 2022, conduct trials and test samples.
South Korea has blocked access to Chinese AI startup DeepSeek across government agencies, citing security concerns.