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DeepSeek may be removed from app stores in Germany over data privacy and compliance concerns, according to sources familiar ...
Texas AG Ken Paxton has secured billions in settlements and launched investigations into over 200 companies over data privacy ...
According to German authorities, the company behind DeepSeek AI (Hangzhou DeepSeek Artificial Intelligence Co., Ltd) violates Art. 46 (1) of the GDPR, which rules the need for "appropriate safeguards" ...
Germany's data protection commissioner has asked Apple and Google to remove Chinese AI startup DeepSeek from their app stores in the country due to concerns about data protection, following a similar ...
Due to unauthorised data transfers, Germany is urging Google and Apple to take DeepSeek out of app stores. It is tampering ...
Kamp explained in the press release: "The transfer of user data by DeepSeek to China is unlawful ... TechCrunch called Meta's AI app "a privacy disaster." 2025 games: This year's upcoming releasesBest ...
Chinese AI startup DeepSeek, which said in January it had developed an AI model to rival ChatGPT at much lower cost, has come under scrutiny in some countries for its security policies and privacy ...
According to Deepseek's own privacy policy, it stores numerous bits of personal data, such as requests to its AI system or uploaded files. All of this information is stored on computers in China.
The decline deepened following the news that Germany's top privacy regulator had officially declared the Chinese AI chatbot DeepSeek "illegal". The regulator invoked the EU's Digital Services Act and ...
Calls for sweeping AI regulation are growing louder—from D.C. hearings to tech think tanks. But amid all this hand-wringing, ...
DeepSeek's privacy policy discloses that they collect all kinds of data including chat and search query history, keystroke patterns, IP addresses, and activity from other apps.
Czech Republic has banned Chinese AI firm DeepSeek from the public sector over fears of data access by Beijing.