REUTERS
April 28, 2025 at 17:04 JST
DeepSeek’s official website (Asahi Shimbun file photo)
SEOUL--Chinese artificial intelligence service DeepSeek became available again on South Korean app markets on Monday for the first time in about two months, when downloads were suspended after authorities cited breaches in data protection rules.
South Korea’s Personal Information Protection Commission said on Thursday that DeepSeek transferred user data and prompts without permission when the service first launched in South Korea in January.
Downloading the app was suspended in February after the questions over personal data protection surfaced, but the service was available for download again on South Korea’s app market including via Apple’s App Store and Google Play Store.
"We process your personal information in compliance with the Personal Information Protection Act of Korea," DeepSeek said in a revised privacy policy note applied to the app.
DeepSeek said users had the option to refuse to allow the transfer of personal information to a number of companies in China and the United States.
DeepSeek did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday.
South Korea’s data protection agency said DeepSeek had voluntarily decided to make the app available for download, which it is free to do after at least partially reflecting its recommendations.
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