U.S. tech companies are old and young sex videosknown to stockpile as much user data as they can, but DeepSeek's privacy policy makes Meta, Google, and OpenAI look tame.
Over the past few days, China-based AI startup DeepSeek has catapulted into tech consciousness with an open-source model that many claim is just as good, if not better, than OpenAI models and API costs for a fraction of the price. DeepSeek R1 might be significantly cheaper to run, but your privacy and security are the actual cost.
Looking through the fine print of DeepSeek's Privacy Policy, numerous red flags worth examining before you sign up.
SEE ALSO: DeepSeek AI: What you need to know about the ChatGPT rival"The personal information we collect from you may be stored on a server located outside of the country where you live. We store the information we collect in secure servers located in the People's Republic of China," the privacy policy reads.
In another section about how DeepSeek shares user data, the company states that it may share user information to "comply with applicable law, legal process, or government requests."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
As with the ongoing TikTok ban — initially enacted due to concerns about privacy, national security, surveillance, and propaganda — DeepSeek's privacy policy raises concerns about a U.S. foreign adversary's ability to access U.S. user data. Users are familiar with the massive amounts of data U.S. tech companies collect, but China's cybersecurity laws make it much easier for the government to demand data from its tech companies. Additionally, DeepSeek users have reported instances of censorship, when it comes to criticizing the Chinese government or asking about Tiananmen Square.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Not only does DeepSeek collect "text or audio input, prompt, uploaded files, feedback, chat history, or other content that [the user] provide[s] to our model and Services," but it also collects information from your device, including "device model, operating system, keystroke patterns or rhythms, IP address, and system language."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Companies with AI models like Google, Meta, and OpenAI collect similar troves of information, but their privacy policies do not mention collecting keystrokes. There's also the added issue that DeepSeek sends your user data straight to Chinese servers.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
DeepSeek's privacy policy states that the company retains user information "for as long as necessary to provide our Services and for the other purposes set out in this Privacy Policy."
For context, Google Gemini could can retain your data for up to three years, so, not great. OpenAI saves your deleted data for 30 days or 90 days for Operator. However, Meta also has an indefinite data retention period in the U.S.
If knowing that Meta saves your data indefinitely makes you uneasy, DeepSeek's policy is even more of a cybersecurity red flag because of China's governmental authority over its private sector. An undefined retention period exposes user data to even more risk to security breaches.
In DeepSeek's privacy policy, there's no mention of the security of its servers. There's nothing about whether data is encrypted, either stored or in transmission, and zero information about safeguards to prevent unauthorized access.
DeepSeek also doesn't say whether users can opt out of sharing their data to train its models. Although Google and Meta have this in common with the LLM, which is to say it's not completely unfounded, it's always worth mentioning: Whatever you share with the chatbot, you share with the internet — and maybe the Chinese government in this instance.
Mashable has reached out to DeepSeek for further clarification about its policies and will update this story with a response.
Topics Artificial Intelligence DeepSeek
Um, did Barack Obama win HQ Trivia last night?DeFi platform begs hackers to return $600 million in stolen cryptoAll the fiercest signs from the Time's Up rally in LondonStunning photo of Jupiter's largest moon marks 10 years for Juno probeTide Pod porn that will whet your appetite and cleanse your paletteSamsung Galaxy Buds 2 are a much cheaper alternative to AirPods ProTikTok's new privacy features make teens think about their decisionsInstagram, please stop telling me to follow people I knowInstagram will now let users limit interactions from nonPentagon’s proposed nuclear strategy elevates cyberattacks to a terrifying new realmSamsung's Galaxy Watch 4 Series aims for an easy AppleChamillionaire offers to help family of immigrant deported to MexicoHow scientists are preparing wheat for climate changeIssa Rae had a really awkward moment when paparazzi confused her with another black womanScammers target YouTube's smart TV activation sites with help from GoogleGigabyte reportedly hit with ransomware attackThe DeFi hacker who stole $600 million in crypto is... giving it back?The White House turned a shutdown away message into a political attackWho is Captain Britain? The secret history of the MCU's new superheroThe DeFi hacker who stole $600 million in crypto is... giving it back? Happy Birthday, Huck! by Sadie Stein Things Behind the Sun by Brian Cullman How to Get into College, Indiana Jones Edition by Sadie Stein Gracie and Cyril: An Oral History by Emily Greenhouse The Making of Motherwell by Sadie Stein Happy 2013, From Mark Twain by Sadie Stein Holiday … Cheer? by Sadie Stein Letter from an Airplane by Sadie Stein A Truth Universally Acknowledged by Sadie Stein Fast, Cheap, and Out of Control: Modernists Go Off The Rise and Fall of Dandy by Sadie Stein A Printer Called Lethem, and Other News by Sadie Stein David Opdyke by Yevgeniya Traps William Styron in Letters, Part 3 by William Styron Reading the Viaduct by Jessica Vivian Chiu Scott and Longfellow: Partners in the Long, Mild Twilight by Micki Myers We Have a ... Winner? (NSFW Here is a LEGO Scrooge for You by Sadie Stein On the Twelfth Day of the Twelfth Month of 2012... by Sadie Stein Pleasure Domes with Parking by Aaron Gilbreath
2.4047s , 10522.4921875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【old and young sex videos】,New Knowledge Information Network