French privacy watchdog to investigate DeepSeek AI over data concerns
French and European regulators are questioning DeepSeek over potential privacy risks in its AI systems.
France‘s data protection authority, the CNIL, announced it will question DeepSeek to better understand how the Chinese company’s AI system operates and assess potential privacy risks for users. The move comes as European regulators intensify scrutiny of AI, following concerns raised by Italy and Ireland over DeepSeek’s handling of personal data.
DeepSeek recently gained international attention after revealing its latest AI model, DeepSeek-V3, was trained using less than $6 million worth of Nvidia H800 computing power. European authorities have been particularly vigilant about data protection, with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) setting stringent standards for privacy. Under GDPR, violations can result in fines of up to 4% of a company’s global turnover.
The CNIL’s investigation follows a broader European push to regulate AI technology, with new rules imposing strict transparency obligations on high-risk AI systems. Other countries, such as Italy and Ireland, have also launched inquiries into DeepSeek, reflecting growing concerns over AI’s implications for data privacy across the continent.