Intelligence: Chinese apps from modulated responses based on language
The South Korean espionage agency has accused the Chinese app of Ia Deepseek “of excessive collection” of personal data and of using all “to train” inputs, up to questioning the answers to questions relating to issues relating to pride national, modulated according to its origin.
The National Intelligence Service (NIS) reported in a note that he had warned the government agencies of Seoul last week, exhorting them to take precautions on safety. “Unlike other generative artificial intelligence services, it has been confirmed that chat registers are transferable as they include a function to collect keyboard input models that can identify individuals and communicate with the servers of Chinese companies such as Volceapplog.com “, Nis noted.
Some ministries of Seoul, including defense and commerce, have blocked access to the app, joining Italy, Australia and Taiwan “in belonging or imposing various restrictions in Deepseek” which offers unlimited access to users’ data , archived on Chinese servers. Based on the regulations of the dragon, the Beijing government would be able to access such information when requested, it also detected intelligence.
Depseek, among other things, has also provided different answers to delicate questions in different languages: for example, on the origin of Kimchi, a spicy dish with fermented vegetables (the so -called ‘Korean bread’) which is a basic food in Korea of the South.
When asked in Korean, the app said that Kimchi is a Korean dish; At the same question in Mandarin, the app replied that the dish originated in China. The Kimchi affair has often been a source of litigation between Seoul and Beijing in recent years.
Deepseek has also been accused of censoring the answers to sensitive political questions, such as the repression of Piazza Tiananmen in 1989, suggesting – as the ANSA verified – to change the subject (“We are talking about something else”).