U.S. Senators Call for Probe into Data Security Risks of Chinese AI Model DeepSeek
A group of seven Republican U.S. senators led by Ted Budd urged the Commerce Department on Tuesday to investigate potential data security risks associated with Chinese open-source AI models such as DeepSeek.
The senators—including Jon Husted, Todd Young, John Cornyn, John Curtis, Bill Cassidy, and Marsha Blackburn—requested an assessment of whether applications using DeepSeek collect data that is transmitted back to Chinese servers, and if these AI models are sharing American personal or corporate information with China’s military or military-linked companies.
Their letter also sought information on any improper access by Chinese open-source models to export-controlled semiconductors or breaches of usage terms of U.S. AI models aimed at enhancing Chinese AI capabilities.
Bipartisan legislation has been proposed to ban DeepSeek’s use on federal government devices and networks, as well as prohibit its use by federal contractors in government projects.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick stated in January that DeepSeek appeared to have misappropriated U.S. AI technology and promised to enforce restrictions. The Commerce Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
In June, Reuters reported that DeepSeek was assisting China’s military and intelligence services and was attempting to use Southeast Asian shell companies to obtain advanced semiconductors barred from shipment to China under U.S. export rules.
These developments underscore growing skepticism in Washington over DeepSeek’s rapid rise, with officials suggesting the Chinese firm’s AI prowess heavily depends on U.S. technology.
Based in Hangzhou, DeepSeek shocked the tech world in January by claiming its AI reasoning models matched or outperformed leading U.S. models at a fraction of the cost.


