A bipartisan group of lawmakers on Capitol Hill plans to introduce legislation on Thursday prohibiting the use of the Chinese-owned DeepSeek artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot app on U.S. government devices. The legislation, prompted by national security concerns that Chinese intelligence agents could use the app to attain sensitive data, follows earlier action by Congress to bar TikTok on government devices as well.
Representatives Darin LaHood (R-IL) and Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ) are cosponsoring the legislation, which is being driven in part by a report from Feroot Security, a cybersecurity firm. Citing the report’s findings, Rep. LaHood contends, “Under no circumstances can we allow a CCP [Chinese Communist Party] company to obtain sensitive government or personal data.”
Notably, the report identified hidden code in the DeepSeek app potentially capable of relaying user information to China Mobile, a telecommunications entity controlled by the Chinese state. China Mobile is currently barred from operating in the United States.
“Our personal information is being sent to China, there is no denial, and the DeepSeek tool is collecting everything that American users connect to it,” Feroot Security CEO Ivan Tsarynny said in a recent interview.
Meanwhile, some federal agencies have already moved to bar employees from accessing DeepSeek on their work devices. The U.S. Navy and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) have both banned the app, citing security concerns and the potential for Chinese espionage.
Late last year, Congress passed legislation mandating that the social media app TikTok be divested from its Chinese-owned parent company ByteDance or face a public ban in the U.S.
President Donald J. Trump extended TikTok’s deadline for 75 additional days in late January.