Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

South Korean intelligence accuses DeepSeek of collecting "excessive" personal data

Báo Giao thôngBáo Giao thông10/02/2025

South Korea's spy agency has accused China's AI app DeepSeek of "excessively" collecting personal data and using the input data for training, while also questioning the app's response to questions related to ethnic issues.


South Korea's National Intelligence Service (NIS) sent an official notice to government agencies last week, calling for security precautions against Chinese artificial intelligence applications.

Tình báo Hàn Quốc cáo buộc DeepSeek thu thập dữ liệu cá nhân

South Korean intelligence accused DeepSeek of collecting "excessive" personal data.

“Unlike other generative AI services, it has been confirmed that the chat records are transferable because it includes a function that collects personally identifiable keyboard input patterns and communicates with servers of Chinese companies such as volceapplog.com,” the NIS said in a statement released over the weekend.

Several government ministries in South Korea have blocked access to the app, citing security concerns, similar to Australia and Taiwan (China) issuing warnings or imposing restrictions on DeepSeek.

DeepSeek allows advertisers unlimited access to user data and stores South Korean users' data on Chinese servers. Under Chinese law, the Chinese government can access that information upon request, the NIS explained.

The NIS also noted that DeepSeek provided different answers to potentially sensitive questions in different languages. They cited one such question about the origins of kimchi—a spicy, fermented dish that is a staple in Korea.

When asked about this in Korean, the app said kimchi is a Korean dish. When asked the same question in Chinese, it said the dish originated in China. The origin of kimchi has sometimes been a source of contention between Korean and Chinese social media users in recent years.

DeepSeek did not immediately respond to an emailed request for comment from Reuters. Asked about the South Korean government ministries’ moves to block DeepSeek, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman said at a news conference on Feb. 6 that the Chinese government attaches great importance to data privacy and security and protects it in accordance with the law.

The spokesman also said Beijing would never ask any company or individual to collect or store data in violation of the law.

(Source Reuters)



Source: https://www.baogiaothong.vn/tinh-bao-han-quoc-cao-buoc-deepseek-thu-thap-du-lieu-ca-nhan-qua-muc-192250210184644605.htm

Comment (0)

No data
No data
Admire the million-year-old Chu Dang Ya volcano in Gia Lai
It took Vo Ha Tram 6 weeks to complete the music project praising the Fatherland.
Hanoi coffee shop is bright with red flags and yellow stars to celebrate the 80th anniversary of National Day September 2nd
Wings flying on the A80 training ground
Special pilots in the flying formation to celebrate National Day September 2
Soldiers march through the hot sun on the training ground
Watch helicopters rehearse in the sky of Hanoi in preparation for National Day September 2
U23 Vietnam radiantly brought home the Southeast Asian U23 Championship trophy
Northern islands are like 'rough gems', cheap seafood, 10 minutes by boat from the mainland
The powerful formation of 5 SU-30MK2 fighters prepares for the A80 ceremony

Heritage

Figure

Business

No videos available

News

Political System

Local

Product