China’s AI Platform DeepSeek Faces Global Backlash Over Censorship, Propaganda & Data Privacy Concerns

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Human rights activists and experts warn that DeepSeek serves as a tool for Chinese state surveillance, suppressing dissent and spreading government propaganda.

Beijing, January 29: China’s newly developed AI platform, DeepSeek, has sparked international controversy over allegations of censorship, propaganda, and digital surveillance. While marketed as a major technological advancement, the AI tool has been accused of suppressing sensitive discussions, collecting personal data, and promoting Chinese Communist Party (CCP) narratives, according to Campaign for Uyghurs.

The advocacy group raised concerns that DeepSeek aggressively stores user data, including IP addresses and conversation logs, on China-based servers, making it susceptible to government exploitation. Activists fear that this data collection could be used to silence dissidents, particularly those discussing human rights abuses in Xinjiang.

“It collects sensitive data that would benefit the CCP, a regime known for human rights abuses. Chinese AI platforms and apps fuel threats including digital transnational repression. We can’t afford to overlook this,” said Rushan Abbas, Executive Director of Campaign for Uyghurs.

AI Suppressing Discussion on Xinjiang, Critics Say

Swiss digital law expert Jan Czarnocki tested DeepSeek and found that it refused to acknowledge China’s actions in Xinjiang as genocide or crimes against humanity. Instead, the AI stopped responding whenever such topics were raised.

“DeepSeek might be a technological breakthrough, but it is also a mouthpiece for Chinese propaganda,” Czarnocki wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

Czarnocki further suggested that DeepSeek’s open-source framework should be retrained with factual, independent data to ensure its credibility and security.

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Calls for International Action Against AI-Powered Repression

The Open Source Intel (OSINT) group, a US-based news and intelligence organization, also reported that DeepSeek refused to answer questions about Uyghur persecution, further proving its biased programming.

With growing concerns over AI manipulation, activists and researchers are urging the global tech community to take a firm stand against AI tools that facilitate repression. Critics warn that state-controlled AI like DeepSeek poses a serious threat to free speech, digital privacy, and human rights.

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