News

This week, Germany’s top data protection regulator formally asked Apple and Google to remove Chinese startup DeepSeek from their app stores, citing concerns over the illegal transfer of personal ...
Germany's data protection commissioner has asked Apple and Google to remove Chinese AI startup DeepSeek from their app stores in the country due to concerns about data protection, following a similar ...
On June 27, Meike Kamp, Berlin Commissioner for Data Protection and Freedom of Information, announced in a press release that her office is calling on Google and Apple to remove the DeepSeek app ...
Germany has told Apple and Google to block the Chinese AI app DeepSeek from their app stores. This comes amid rising European pressure over data privacy concerns, with authorities claiming ...
A top regulator in Germany asked Google and Apple on Friday to remove Chinese AI startup DeepSeek from their app stores in their country due to data privacy concerns. Meike Kamp, Germany’s data ...
Germany’s data protection commissioner, Meike Kamp, has asked Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOGL) to remove Chinese AI startup DeepSeek from their app stores in the country due to concerns about ...
The move comes after Kamp previously requested DeepSeek remove its app in Germany voluntarily, or change its practices to protect German users' data, which DeepSeek failed to do. Kamp explained in the ...
DeepSeek is facing a potential ban from app stores in Germany due to illegal transfers of user data to China. German data protection official Meike Kamp has filed a formal request that Apple and ...
Due to unauthorised data transfers, Germany is urging Google and Apple to take DeepSeek out of app stores. It is tampering ...
OpenAI says DeepSeek, its sudden Chinese rival, may have "inappropriately” taken data from its model to spin up its own artificial intelligence chatbot. DeepSeek released a surprisingly ...
A top regulator in Germany asked Google and Apple on Friday to remove Chinese AI startup DeepSeek from their app stores in their country due to data privacy concerns.
The San Francisco-based start-up, which is now valued at $157 billion, said that DeepSeek may have used data generated by OpenAI technologies to teach similar skills to its own systems.