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DeepSeek: South Korea temporarily bans AI app


Read more: Israel: US Senators reject Trump’s Gaza plan, want Arab alternatives

SEOUL: South Korea on Monday said the Chinese AI DeepSeek app would not be available from local app stores, pending a review of the company’s handling of user data.

Choi Jang-hyuk, vice chairperson of Seoul’s Personal Information Protection Commission, told reporters that authorities will “thoroughly examine” DeepSeek’s personal data processing practices “to ensure compliance” with local laws.

The data protection agency also added in a statement that DeepSeek was cooperating with them and “acknowledged that considerations for domestic privacy laws were somewhat lacking.”

Authorities in South Korea said this will take time which was why they were temporarily suspending DeepSeek in the country.

The app was removed from local app stores on Saturday and the South Korean version of the Apple store on Monday. Users who had already downloaded DeepSeek were still able to use the app.

Seoul asked existing users to use the app with extreme caution until it was made compliant with local laws.

The Chinese startup has gained a lot of attention in recent weeks due to its ability to match functions of western AI chatbots such as ChatGPT at a fraction of the cost. However, many countries are wary of its storage of personal data from users.

Read more: Israel: US Senators reject Trump’s Gaza plan, want Arab alternatives

DeepSeek says the data is stored in secure servers located in China.

Earlier this month, many South Korean government ministries and police had banned access to DeepSeek on their devices. Australia has also banned the app from all government devices over concerns that the app was gathering too much sensitive information.

Beijing denies trying to use companies to access private data, and has condemned the “politicisation of economic, trade and technological issues.”

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