Taiwan says government departments should not use DeepSeek, citing security concerns
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Taiwan’s Ministry of Digital Affairs said: “DeepSeek’s AI service is a Chinese product, and its operation involves cross-border transmission and information leakage.”
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
TAIPEI – Taiwan’s digital ministry said on Jan 31 that government departments should not use Chinese start-up DeepSeek’s artificial intelligence (AI) service, saying that as the product is from China it represents a security concern.
Democratically governed Taiwan has long been wary of Chinese tech, given Beijing’s sovereignty claims over the island, and its military and political threats against the government in Taipei.
In a statement, Taiwan’s Ministry of Digital Affairs said that government departments are not allowed to use DeepSeek’s AI service to “prevent information security risks”.
“DeepSeek’s AI service is a Chinese product, and its operation involves cross-border transmission and information leakage and other information security concerns, and is a product that jeopardises the country’s information security,” the ministry said.
The ministry will continue to keep abreast of relevant technological developments and make “timely adjustments” to its information security policies in order to safeguard security, it added.
Earlier on Jan 31, South Korea’s information privacy watchdog said it plans to ask DeepSeek about how the personal information of users is managed.
The authorities in France, Italy and Ireland and other countries have also been looking into DeepSeek’s use of personal data.
By Jan 27, DeepSeek’s free AI assistant had overtaken US rival ChatGPT in downloads from Apple’s app store and global investors dumped US tech stocks, wiping US$593 billion (S$805 billion) off chipmaker Nvidia’s market value in a record one-day loss for any company on Wall Street. REUTERS

