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A major DeepSeek data breach reveals the growing risks of AI misuse — and why South African companies need to rethink their ...
When China’s DeepSeek AI technology was unveiled to the world back in January, it took many in the technology sector by surprise. The new tool appeared to be a faster, smarter and cheaper alternative ...
Recently published research introduces the first infrastructure-aware benchmark, revealing the energy, water, and carbon ...
South Korea’s data protection watchdog has accused DeepSeek, the Chinese start-up whose artificial intelligence-powered chatbot took the tech scene by storm earlier this year, of transferring ...
FIRST ON FOX: A powerful House Committee is demanding information from DeepSeek on what U.S. data it used to train the AI model as members accuse the company of being in the pocket of the Chinese ...
Chinese artificial intelligence app DeepSeek was transferring personal data to a cloud services platform without users’ consent while it was still available for download, South Korea’s data ...
According to the commission, DeepSeek, which launched its service here on Jan. 15, transferred user data to four overseas companies — three in China and one in the U.S. — until new downloads ...
Both user data and prompts were forwarded from the AI app to a company in Beijing, according to South Korea's data protection authority. As previously reported, several European countries are ...
From day one, DeepSeek built its own data center clusters for model training. But like other AI companies in China, DeepSeek has been affected by U.S. export bans on hardware. To train one of its ...
Chinese artificial intelligence app DeepSeek was transferring personal data to a cloud services platform without users' consent while it was still available for download, South Korea's data ...
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