Lawmakers are now pushing to immediately ban the Chinese chatbot DeepSeek on government devices, citing national security concerns that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) may have built a backdoor into DeepSeek to access Americans' sensitive private data. If passed, DeepSeek could be banned within 60 days.
DeepSeek shocked the world when it debuted last month. Rumored to rival OpenAI's o1 reasoning model despite costing significantly less to develop, DeepSeek's open source model is free to download. That propelled its popularity, making DeepSeek the most-downloaded app in the US.
As DeepSeek was rapidly installed on an increasing number of US phones, research emerged yesterday suggesting that DeepSeek is linked to a Chinese telecom company, China Mobile. In an analysis shared with AP News, Ivan Tsarynny, the CEO of Feroot, revealed that DeepSeek apparently hid code that sends user login information to China Mobile.
China Mobile, lawmakers noted, was "banned by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for use in the United States."
"It’s mindboggling that we are unknowingly allowing China to survey Americans and we’re doing nothing about it," Tsarynny told AP News.
Tsarynny's analysis prompted bipartisan legislation announced today from US Representatives Josh Gottheimer (D-N.J.) and Darin LaHood (R-Ill.). Their bill, the “No DeepSeek on Government Devices Act,” will be introduced today to address what they consider an "alarming threat to US national security."
"We have deeply disturbing evidence that they are using DeepSeek to steal the sensitive data of US citizens," Gottheimer said in the press release. "This is a five alarm national security fire," he warned, urging a probe to "get to the bottom of DeepSeek’s malign activities."
While the text of the bill is currently unavailable, the release suggested that Americans are already "sharing highly sensitive, proprietary information with DeepSeek—contracts, documents, and financial records."
"In the wrong hands, this data is an enormous asset to the CCP, a known foreign adversary," lawmakers warned.
"We simply can’t risk the CCP infiltrating the devices of our government officials and jeopardizing our national security," Gottheimer said in the release. Because of the alleged link to China Mobile, he told The Wall Street Journal that passing the law should be a "no-brainer."
Other countries have banned or partially banned DeepSeek on government devices, including Australia, Italy, South Korea, and Taiwan. Several federal agencies have also quickly moved to restrict federal workers' DeepSeek use, including the US Navy and NASA. And Texas became the first state to ban DeepSeek on state-issued devices last month, along with several other Chinese apps growing in popularity in the US, like RedNote, which became a popular TikTok alternative when TikTok briefly shut down.