
INA- SOURCES
ChatGPT maker OpenAI has hit out at Chinese AI lab DeepSeek, alleging it “could be compelled by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) to manipulate its models to cause harm."
In a letter to the US Office of Science and Technology Policy, OpenAI calls for a ban on China-produced equipment and AI models "that violate user privacy and create security risks such as the risk of intellectual property (IP) theft" in "Tier 1" countries like the UK, Canada, and Germany.
The firm alleges that “there is significant risk in building on top of DeepSeek models in critical infrastructure and other high-risk use cases” due to the potential for Chinese government interference. OpenAI compares the risk to that posed by Chinese telecom and consumer tech giant Huawei, which is heavily sanctioned in the US and much of Western Europe.
In trying to ban TikTok, the US government also argued that parent company ByteDance could be compelled to hand over control to the CCP.
DeepSeek founder Liang Wenfeng reportedly met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during an AI summit. But, to be fair, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman also appeared at the White House alongside President Trump to champion his company's participation in Project Stargate.
Banning DeepSeek and other Chinese AIs would likely benefit OpenAI's business, so the letter may be a tad self-serving. OpenAI voicing concern about the "risk of intellectual property (IP) theft" is also a little rich given that it's currently embroiled in several lawsuits that accuse it of scraping copyrighted content without permission to train its own models.
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