South Korea has moved to block access to the Chinese startup DeepSeek’s artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot on government ...
South Korea, along with countries such as France and Italy, have asked questions about DeepSeek's data practices, submitting ...
Officials in South Korea and Australia have cited concerns about user data and national security as reasons to block the ...
Representative Josh Gottheimer, a New Jersey Democrat, introduced the bill along with Darin LaHood, an Illinois Republican, ...
DeepSeek launched its R1 chatbot, which quickly attracted attention by claiming to rival leading AI systems in the United ...
The defence and trade ministries cited concerns over data privacy following similar moves by Italy and Australia.
HONG KONG (AP) — Asian shares Friday were mixed, with Chinese technology stocks rising as most other Asian equities declined.
DeepSeek is banned on government devices in South Korea, Australia and Taiwan. More countries might follow suit.
South Korea's industry ministry has temporarily blocked employee access to Chinese Artificial Intelligence (AI)startup ...
Despite the technical concerns, the number of weekly users of the DeepSeek app in Korea has surpassed 1.2 million, ranking it second among generative AI apps after ChatGPT with 4.93 million users.
Governments around the world are tightening restrictions on DeepSeek, a Chinese generative AI platform, over concerns about ...