South Korea's government and private companies are restricting the use of the Chinese artificial intelligence service DeepSeek following similar moves by other countries.
Korea is the latest country to issue caution when using the artificial intelligence-based DeepSeek which has been created by Chinese startup.
The country’s defense ministry has blocked DeepSeek from military networks. The Personal Information Protection Commission (PIPC) has asked the Chinese AI startup to clarify how it handles user data.
Chinese AI chatbot DeepSeek upended the global industry and wiped billions of US tech stocks when it unveiled its R1 program, which it claims was built on cheap, less sophisticated Nvidia ...
Chinese AI chatbot DeepSeek disrupted the global industry and sent billions in US tech stocks tumbling with the launch of its ...
The data protection watchdog in South Korea issued a warning to consumers about using the new Chinese AI platform DeepSeek.
HONG KONG (AP) — Asian shares Friday were mixed, with Chinese technology stocks rising as most other Asian equities declined.
By bno - Taipei Bureau DeepSeek, the Chinese AI start-up, has generated significant attention since its launch of the R1 ...
US lawmakers are moving quickly to block DeepSeek on government devices after the Chinese-owned AI triggered security and ...
DeepSeek launched its R1 chatbot, which quickly attracted attention by claiming to rival leading AI systems in the United ...
Naver Corp., South Korea's leading internet portal operator, said Friday its fourth-quarter net profit jumped nearly 50 ...
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.