A bipartisan bill is already coming that would ban DeepSeek from government devices, echoing TikTok's journey.
TikTok was flickering back to life on Sunday in the U.S., Jan. 19, after no longer being accessible starting the night before. President-elect Donald Trump said he would issue an executive order to ...
The app’s availability in the U.S. has been thrown into jeopardy over data privacy and national security concerns.
TikTok’s executives are “planning for various scenarios” ahead of the Supreme Court likely upholding a US ban of the app. In an internal memo obtained by The Verge, employees were told that the ...
The United States must take aggressive action ... Trump said he opposed a ban.In response to a bipartisan congressional bill that sought to ban TikTok, Trump said he no longer favored a ban ...
US Senator Edward J. Markey and three fellow Democrats filed a bill Tuesday to delay the Jan. 19 shutdown of TikTok in the country, giving its parent company 270 more days to find a buyer for its US ...
House lawmakers are unveiling the "No DeepSeek on Government Devices Act" to ban the app over concerns that it could be sharing data with China's government.
The two sponsors, one a Republican and the other a Democrat, cite concern that the chatbot’s code is linked to China’s ...
TikTok shut down access to its 170 million American users on Jan. 18, hours before a Supreme Court ruling upholding aCongress-passed ban of the app was set to take place. “We are fortunate ...
Lawmakers are now pushing to immediately ban the Chinese chatbot DeepSeek on government devices, citing national security ...
The "No DeepSeek on Government Devices Act" comes after the Chinese AI lab shook Wall Street with its chatbot, a direct ...
A pair of US lawmakers are seeking to ban government workers from using Chinese startup DeepSeek’s artificial intelligence ...