June 27, 2025
Germany tells Apple, Google to block DeepSeek as the Chinese AI app faces rising pressure in Europe
This is not DeepSeek's first run-in with regulators in Europe, following run-ins with Italian and Irish authorities.

In this photo illustration, the DeepSeek logo is seen displayed on a smartphone screen and in the background, the flag of the European Union.

Thomas Fuller | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

One of Germany’s data protection watchdogs on Friday said DeepSeek’s app illegally sends user data to China and asked Google and Apple to consider blocking the artificial intelligence service.

Berlin’s data protection commissioner Meike Kamp said in a statement that DeepSeek’s transfer of German user data to China is “unlawful.”

There is not a readily available way to get in touch with DeepSeek. CNBC has reached out to DeepSeek’s privacy team.

Chinese firm DeepSeek made waves this year when it launched an AI model that it claimed was created at a fraction of the cost of competitors, using less advanced Nvidia chips.

The company also has its own global chatbot AI app, which has been downloaded millions of times, garnering scrutiny.

If the German case against DeepSeek progresses, it could lead to a European Union-wide ban for the app, some experts say.

“It is certainly possible that this incident could lead to an EU-wide ban because the rules that apply in Germany are the same elsewhere in the EU and also in the UK,” Matt Holman, specialist AI and data lawyer at Cripps, told CNBC by email. There are a few steps before this would become reality, however.

What is Germany’s issue with DeepSeek?

“DeepSeek has not been able to convincingly demonstrate to my authority that the data of German users is protected in China at a level equivalent to that of the European Union,” Germany’s Kamp said, according to a CNBC translation. “Chinese authorities have extensive access rights to personal data within the sphere of influence of Chinese companies.”

Under the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation — the bloc’s huge data protection law — companies are prohibited from sending data outside the region unless specific safeguards are in place at the countries of arrival. Those safeguards must meet GDPR requirements in Europe.

In short, the Berlin data protection commissioner is concerned that Chinese authorities could access German user data sent by DeepSeek to China.

What are the next steps?