Is anyone actually surprised by this?

  • Ju135@lemmings.world
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    21 hours ago

    This make the news only because it’s going to chinese servers. Didn’t see anything like that about ChatGPT or the one made by Google.

  • Jhex@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    as opposed to OpenAI which also stores keystrokes and then sells them to anyone who’d pay?

  • JOMusic@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    This article is what US propaganda looks like folks. Mashable should be ashamed.

    Literally all AI companies do this to run their services. Except you can actually download Deepseek and run it completely securely on your own devices. You know who doesn’t allow that security? OpenAI and the other US companies currently being screwed.

  • geneva_convenience@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    They should store the data in US servers like OpenAI does. Apparently then Mashable won’t write an article about it.

    The criticism thrown at DeepSeek in the past days is just as applicable to American AI models. But when that was brought up it in the past it was “making things political”.

    At least I can run DeepSeek locally.

  • Petter1@lemm.ee
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    7 hours ago

    We are now at a time where US blocks China services in order to protect their companies

    Just like many US services are banned in China in Order to protect their companies

    So, I hope no surprise…

    ———

    Its or their for countries?

    Edit: I have chosen their

  • ArchRecord@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    the company states that it may share user information to "comply with applicable law, legal process, or government requests.

    Literally every company’s privacy policy here in the US basically just says that too.

    Not only does DeepSeek collect “text or audio input, prompt, uploaded files, feedback, chat history, or other content that [the user] provide[s] to our model and Services,” but it also collects information from your device, including “device model, operating system, keystroke patterns or rhythms, IP address, and system language.”

    Breaking news, company with chatbot you send messages to uses and stores the messages you send, and also does what practically every other app does for demographic statistics gathering and optimizations.

    Companies with AI models like Google, Meta, and OpenAI collect similar troves of information, but their privacy policies do not mention collecting keystrokes. There’s also the added issue that DeepSeek sends your user data straight to Chinese servers.

    They didn’t use the word keystrokes, therefore they don’t collect them? Of course they collect keystrokes, how else would you type anything into these apps?

    In DeepSeek’s privacy policy, there’s no mention of the security of its servers. There’s nothing about whether data is encrypted, either stored or in transmission, and zero information about safeguards to prevent unauthorized access.

    This is the only thing that seems disturbing to me, compared to what we’d like to expect based on the context of what DeepSeek is. Of course, this was proven recently in practice to be terrible policy, so I assume they might shore up their defenses a bit.

    All the articles that talk about this as if it’s some big revelation just boil down to “company does exactly what every other big tech company does in America, except in China”

    • tux@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Collecting keystrokes is very different from collecting text inputted into fields. Keystroke rhythms is even more alarming as that is often used to identify users despite them using privacy settings, or used to collect what’s typed via audio collection.

      Your argument that this is no different than other apps is complete crap. Don’t trust any app that collects that information

      • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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        1 day ago

        The argument stands, though.

        Yes, not ALL other apps do that, but the comment was specifically talking about companies like Google and Meta… they definitely do collect incomplete strings from search forms (down to individual characters) when they display search suggestions, for example. They might not mention “keystrokes” in the legal text, but I don’t see why they wouldn’t be able to extrapolate your typing pattern since they do have the timing information which should be enough data to, at some level, profile it.

    • quant@leminal.space
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      2 days ago

      By extension, anything that’s not self hosted means 3rd party actors snooping. American, Chinese, whoever happens to operate that machine.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Building my entire data model around the Tienanmen Square copypasta. I can run this thing on a Raspberry Pi plugged into a particularly starchy potato and it reliably returns the only answer I’ve thought to ask it.

  • Zip2@feddit.uk
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    2 days ago

    Did the American technology giants think they had the monopoly on capturing human input too?

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    “We store the information we collect in secure servers located in the People’s Republic of China”

    Now you Americans know how we Europeans feel when Google, Amazon and Facebook store our information on American servers. Hint: The protective wall between Chinese servers and their government are about as good as the one between American servers and their government - at least for non-US citizens. The last thin veil of privacy for Eurpeans has been ripped to shreds by Trump last week.

    • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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      1 day ago

      The last thin veil of privacy for Eurpeans has been ripped to shreds by Trump last week.

      What did he do? I know Trump does not like the GDPR, but did he sign something affecting it last week?

      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        He killed the EU-US Data Privacy Framework. Theoretically, no company is allowed to transfer data of European citizens to US-based servers anymore. Sadly, Ursula von der Leyen is lacking the balls to act on this.

        • Ferk@lemmy.ml
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          12 hours ago

          Thanks, I did not know. I think you are referring to this: https://www.freevacy.com/news/noyb/trumps-actions-to-dismantle-pclob-threatens-eu-us-data-transfers/6088

          To be completely honest… as an European I would be happy if they actually did make it so that no EU-US data transfer were allowed… we need to stop depending on all these US-based services… but like you said, they probably don’t have the balls to pull the plug. Which makes me wonder if that board was actually really any protection at all for privacy or it had always been an empty shell used as an excuse on both sides just to keep up appearances and maintain the plug on.

          I honestly think this could be a win for us. Worst case scenario, nothing really changes but some masks fall off and at least some people would stop acting under false pretense (which could open the doors for change). So I’m actually glad he did that.