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DeepSeek faces ban from Apple, Google app stores in Germany

DeepSeek faces ban from Apple, Google app stores in Germany

Indian Express9 hours ago

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 crackdown elsewhere.
Commissioner Meike Kamp said in a statement on Friday that she had made the request because DeepSeek illegally transfers users' personal data to China.
The two U.S. tech giants must now review the request promptly and decide whether to block the app in Germany, she added, though her office has not set a precise timeframe.
Google said it had received the notice and was reviewing it.
DeepSeek did not respond to a request for comment. Apple was not immediately available for comment.
According to its own privacy policy, DeepSeek stores numerous pieces of personal data, such as requests to its AI programme or uploaded files, on computers in China.
'DeepSeek has not been able to provide my agency with convincing evidence that German users' data is protected in China to a level equivalent to that in the European Union,' Kamp said.
'Chinese authorities have far-reaching access rights to personal data within the sphere of influence of Chinese companies,' she added.
The commissioner said she took the decision after asking DeepSeek in May to meet the requirements for non-EU data transfers or else voluntarily withdraw its app. DeepSeek did not comply with this request, she added.
DeepSeek shook the technology world in January with claims that it had developed an AI model to rival those from U.S. firms such as ChatGPT creator OpenAI at much lower cost.
However, it has come under scrutiny in the United States and Europe for its data security policies.
Italy blocked it from app stores there earlier this year, citing a lack of information on its use of personal data, while the Netherlands has banned it on government devices.
Belgium has recommended government officials not to use DeepSeek. 'Further analyses are underway to evaluate the approach to be followed,' a government spokesperson said.
In Spain, the consumer rights group OCU asked the government's data protection agency in February to investigate threats likely posed by DeepSeek, though no ban has come into force.
The British government said 'the use of DeepSeek remains a personal choice for members of the public.'
'We continue to monitor any national security threats to UK citizens and their data from all sources,' a spokesperson for Britain's technology ministry said.
'If evidence of threats arises, we will not hesitate to take the appropriate steps to protect our national security.'
U.S. lawmakers plan to introduce a bill that would ban U.S. executive agencies from using any AI models developed in China.
Reuters exclusively reported this week that DeepSeek is aiding China's military and intelligence operations.

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After failed listing attempts in the US and UK, China's Shein to file confidentially for Hong Kong IPO: What makes this a rare move for Chinese company

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UK government condemns 'Death to IDF' chants at Glastonbury festival

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Mint

time44 minutes ago

  • Mint

Google's AI charge: How Sergey Brin is taking on the might of OpenAI

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Beating OpenAI Insiders Mint spoke to said that over the past 12 months, Brin has a single-minded focus—beating OpenAI. A fourth executive working on product management at Google said that the transformer model 'should be rightfully our area of expertise and leadership." Since 2024, Brin has also been showing up personally at I/O—entering product demos without a prior warning to check on audience feedback. Executives and analysts believe that Brin's urgency lies in Google's own history. In turn, the executive's return has had a major role in shifting the company's focus—and channeling its focus. 'Sergey has been back since 2023. He's been at work every day focused on AI and Gemini. Another key player is Peter Danenberg who is the godfather of Gemini. In general, the existential threat from Microsoft and Open AI galvanized the entirety of Google to focus on AI," said Ray 'R' Wang, chief executive of US-based tech consulting firm Constellation Research. Busy Pichai Brin is bringing unfazed focus to Gemini, Search and Veo, as Sundar Pichai, the CEO of Google and Alphabet, has multiple areas to focus on—lawsuits, global businesses, government relations, cloud, Android and more, the first executive cited above said. 'In the long run, Google foresees its ability to use video generation as a platform to rope in advertisers worldwide, and eventually, establish market dominance in this field," he added. Pichai, for the longest term, has been viewed as a conservative leader, steering Google's ship with 'one eye on the rear-view mirror," said an analyst who didn't want to be identified. 'For Brin, that's too safe a stance at a time when Silicon Valley is going to war with each other over AI dominance. Plus, Pichai has too much to deal with. Brin's view is that AI today needs undivided attention and he's clearly right, as Google's spate of product launches and share price movement shows," the analyst added. In the past year, the company's shares are down over 6%, compared to Microsoft's rise of nearly 10%. While there is no indication that Pichai, who will complete 10 years as the CEO of Google this August (he took over as Alphabet's chief in December 2019), is on his way out, the leadership directives seem to be clearly divided. Google did not respond to Mint's request for a comment on Brin's recent involvements. Narrowing gap? Brin's work may be showing early results. At a pre-keynote session with journalists during the developer conference, chief executive Pichai said that the Gemini developer platform currently had over seven million developers using its code to create AI applications. This is significant because as of this year, OpenAI's official statistics pegs its outreach at around three million developers. 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Phil Fersht, chief executive of New York-based tech analysis firm HFS Research, said that Google is 'sitting in an unbelievable position to win the enterprise AI war—if it can get its business model right." 'Net-net, the firm needs to be prepared to cannibalize half of its legacy search business and insert Gemini onto as many enterprises and individual users as possible. It has the resources, talent, and user base to take on OpenAI, Microsoft and Anthropic," he said. Speed wins GenAI startups such as OpenAI, Anthropic and Perplexity are known to move fast. They deploy features super quick, reach out to developers and serve a broad variety of AI use cases. Google, in contrast, is viewed to be slower, like Kolla of Convergence Catalyst hinted. Pichai, speaking with journalists a day ahead of I/O 2025, underlined a new way of working—with speed. 'Typically, we don't make announcements leading up to our big day at I/O each year, but this time it's different. Right now, we're launching products in very frequent intervals, and making technological progress at a rapid pace like never before," he said. Then, at a post-event chat, Pichai reiterated that Google is now making AI announcements to the world 'within an hour or two" of the DeepMind team showcasing the latest advancements in Gemini. 'In the end, agility and appeal to developers will play the biggest role," said Kashyap Kompella, founder of tech consultancy and research firm RPA2AI Research. 'There's no denying that its rivals are moving fast, and there are clear indications within the industry that Google's AI products are not the first choice for developers and end-users," he added. The hope is that Brin's startup-style approach, coupled with Google's inherent strength garnered over almost three decades, could be the company's trump card, says Thomas Reuner, principal analyst at UK-based tech consultancy firm PAC. 'Brin might help shore up Google's advertising business in the short term, but its biggest strategic assets are threefold: the vast data assets from the search business, data integration at scale and the unique IP of DeepMind," he said. 'Given the market noise around generative and agentic AI, these assets don't always make the headlines but provide the moat that so many startups are lacking," he added. Sitting in that satellite office in Mountain View, Brin may be hoping that this moat could firmly establish Gemini, akin to his PageRank moment 29 years ago.

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