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China Expresses Outrage Over Australian Ban on DeepSeek

Herald Sun

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Beijing has reacted with fury after the Australian government moved to ban the controversial Chinese AI company DeepSeek from all of its government systems and devices on national security grounds.

Summary

The article explores the controversy surrounding Australia's decision to ban the Chinese AI company DeepSeek from its government devices due to national security concerns. China's response has been intense, criticizing the move as driven by ideology rather than technology and pointing to Australia's alignment with US policies on Chinese technology. The ban reflects increasing global tensions over AI surveillance and data privacy, highlighting the ongoing struggle between national security and technological integration. The development signifies a cautious approach by nations like Australia in evaluating and potentially mitigating risks associated with foreign AI technologies.

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‘Discrimination’: China fury at Australia DeepSeek banBeijing has hit back at a plan to ban controversial AI app DeepSeek on government devices declaring Canberra to be kowtowing to the US.Benedict Brook@BenedictBrook2 min readFebruary 6, 2025 - 6:28AMSecurityDon't miss out on the headlines from Security. Followed categories will be added to My News.Beijing has reacted with fury after the Australian government moved to ban the controversial Chinese AI company DeepSeek from all of its government systems and devices on national security grounds.Both China’s foreign ministry and a Beijing controlled media outlet have hit back with claims Australia’s plan is “ideological discrimination”.Home affairs minister Tony Burke announced on Tuesday night that the start-up, which sent stock markets into meltdown in recent weeks, would not be allowed to be installed on government devices due to “national security concerns”.That does not represent a ban for everyday users who may choose to download and use DeepSeek.It’s a similar situation to TikTok which is also banned on government devices, yet some politicians do have private TikTok accounts on personal phones.Australia joins Taiwan and the US state of Texas which have similar DeepSeek restrictions on government phones. While Italy has gone a step further and effectively banned DeepSeek entirely by forcing its removal from app stores.China is furious at the DeepSeek ban on Australian government devices. (Photo illustration by Anthony Kwan/Getty Images).‘Ideological discrimination’News agency AFP has reported that on Wednesday night, the Chinese foreign ministry said Australia’s move was “political”.(“It is the) “politicisation of economic, trade and technological issues”, which Beijing opposes, the ministry stated.“The Chinese government … has never and will never require enterprises or individuals to illegally collect or store data,” the statement said.In an article on Chinese Communist Party mouth piece website theGlobal Times, Australia’s move was slammed as kowtowing to the US.“Australia’s move is clearly driven by ideological discrimination, not technological concerns,” Liu Wei, director of the Human-Machine Interaction and Cognitive Engineering Laboratory at Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, told the publication.“When US federal agencies take steps to contain Chinese technology, Australia seems compelled to follow suit.“If Australia were genuinely citing technological risks to national security, it should also have blocked US-based OpenAI and other tech companies that have integrated with DeepSeek. Yet, there is no indication that the Australian government will take similar action against US-based AI firms,” Mr Liu stated.Leader of the House, minister for home affairs and minister for the arts, Tony Burke during Question Time at Parliament House in Canberra. Picture: NewsWire / Martin OllmanOn Tuesday, Mr Burke said theDeepSeek government ban was “swift a decisive action”to protect national security.“AI is a technology full of potential and opportunity – but the Government will not hesitate to act when our agencies identify a national security risk.“Our approach is country-agnostic and focused on the risk to the Australian Government and our assets.”Deep Seek has been banned by a number of territories and organisations. (Photo by JOEL SAGET / AFP)Ed Husic’s warningThe announcement follows a warning from Federal industry and science minister Ed Husic against downloading DeepSeek.Speaking to the ABC, Mr Husic said DeepSeek’s advancements in the field was evidence of China’s “determination in this space”.“China has been determined since the last decade to be a world leader in artificial intelligence,” he said.“It doesn’t come as a surprise that they would try to develop a workaround to some of the restrictions that have been placed on them.”Asked if he would download the app, he urged caution.“I would be very careful about that,” he said.“I don’t have TikTok on my government phone. I think these types of issues have got to be weighed up carefully.”In the US, both NASA and The Pentagon have ordered staff to steer clear of DeepSeek.– with Samantha Maiden.More CoverageAlbo’s big move against Chinese AI appJessica Wang‘Infect devices’: Australia announces AI banSamantha MaidenOriginally published as‘Discrimination’: China fury at Australia DeepSeek banMore related storiesBreaking News‘Infected’: MP’s big call on human rights bodyAn MP has delivered a sharp attack on Australia’s $43m human rights body, suggesting it should be folded up for failing to defend Jewish Aussies.Read moreSecurity130 scam websites a week taken downScammers are becoming increasingly sophisticated but the corporate watchdog is fighting back, taking down more than 130 scam websites a day.Read more