Microsoft publicly bans employees from using DeepSeek for the first time
Brad Smith, Vice Chair and President of Microsoft, stated at a U.S. Senate hearing that an internal ban has been issued prohibiting all employees from using the DeepSeek application (including desktop/mobile versions). Although DeepSeek is an open-source model that companies can deploy themselves to prevent data backflow, Microsoft pointed out that it still poses risks of "spreading propaganda content or generating unsafe code." It is noteworthy that Microsoft has not completely banned competing products (such as Perplexity) in the Windows App Store, but Google-related applications (including Gemini) have quietly disappeared. (TechCrunch)
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
A major whale switched from short to long on BTC, with a position valued at $91 million.
Japan Post Bank, Shinoken, and DeCurret DCP pilot tokenized deposit payments for real estate transactions
Data: US crypto-related stocks mostly rise in pre-market trading, Bitmine up 3.79%
IMF warns that tokenized markets may increase flash crash risks, and governments will intervene with regulation
