Skip to main content
Advertisement
Live broadcast

The US has reported that sensitive DeepSeek data has been made publicly available

Wiz: DeepSeek's sensitive data hit the public domain
0
Озвучить текст
Select important
On
Off

American cybersecurity company Wiz found in the public domain ClickHouse database owned by Chinese AI startup DeepSeek. This was reported on the organization's website.

According to its data, programmers gained full control over the database, which was completely open and disclosed sensitive data.

"This database contained a significant amount of chat history, internal data and sensitive information, including log streams, API secrets and operational data," the company specified.

The company's employees were reportedly able to identify the leaks "within minutes." Initially, they conducted the reconnaissance in order to investigate DeepSeek, which "made a sensation in the field of artificial intelligence."

As "Gazeta.Ru" added , in late January, the Chinese neural network DeepSeek-R1 became one of the most popular applications in the world, dropping Nvidia's shares by $600 billion.

A day earlier it became known that the Chinese AI DeepSeek differs from ChatGPT in that it is focused on the Chinese market, so it works more accurately with the Chinese language and takes into account cultural peculiarities. In addition, DeepSeek provides free access to its models and features, making it accessible to a wide audience.

Prior to this on January 28, Izvestia wrote that the DeepSeek platform is being developed by a company of the same name, which was founded in 2023 in Hangzhou. Its owner is the Chinese hedge fund High-Flyer, focused on the use of AI in the development of algorithms for securities trading. The chatbot is available to users around the world in both mobile app and web page formats.

Переведено сервисом «Яндекс Переводчик»

Live broadcast