• Автор темы News
  • Дата начала
  • " /> News - South Korea pauses downloads of DeepSeek AI over privacy concerns | SoftoolStore.de - Программное обеспечение, Avid Media Composer, Книги, Новости, Windows, Интернет-новости, Бесплатные прокси (HTTP, Socks 4, Socks 5)

    News South Korea pauses downloads of DeepSeek AI over privacy concerns

    News

    Команда форума
    Редактор
    Регистрация
    17 Февраль 2018
    Сообщения
    33 910
    Лучшие ответы
    0
    Баллы
    2 093
    Offline
    #1
    DeepSeek, the massively popular Chinese AI assistant, has been temporarily unavailable from app stores in South Korea since February 15. A press release from the country’s data protection authority, the Personal Information Protection Commission (PIPC), stated that downloads will resume once the Chinese AI company complies with local data protection laws, while those with the app can still use it. DeepSeek is also blocked on South Korean government and military devices.

    DeepSeek only established a local presence in South Korea on February 10. The company also acknowledged that it didn’t fully consider South Korea’s data protection laws when launching the service globally. Fortunately for South Korean users, the new AI powerhouse intends to cooperate with the PIPC.


    The PIPC says that inspecting DeepSeek will take some time. On-site inspections of six AI services from Google, OpenAI, Microsoft and others took around five months. This inspection should take less time because it only involves DeepSeek.

    In a statement to TechCrunch, the PIPC revealed that it discovered DeepSeek was transferring Korean users' data to ByteDance, TikTok’s parent company. Local users were warned against entering personal information into the app.

    Last month, the Italian Data Protection Authority or Garante, sent DeepSeek an information request asking what type of data the models were trained on and several other questions. Other countries like Australia and Taiwan have also banned the app on government devices due to security concerns.

    Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun responded to South Korea’s DeepSeek ban, claiming Beijing would never ask any company or individual to store or collect data illicitly.

    This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/south-k...-over-privacy-concerns-163302959.html?src=rss
     
    Сверху Снизу