Apple and Google ban Deepseek on the App Stores in Germany

Reuters

Apple and Google Ban DeepSeek Amid Data Privacy Concerns in Germany
A digital graphic representation highlighting DeepSeek’s removal from the Apple App Store and Google Play Store in Germany following a data protection crackdown.

Deepseek faces bans in various countries, including Italy, Belgium, and several others, which have also raised questions on its safety principles. They are claiming that Deepseek stores their personal data on China’s servers. This issue has not settled down after bans, but is still under discussion among many countries’ lawmakers. On June 27, 2025 Germany’s data protection commissioner asked Apple and Google to remove Deepseek from their stores due to security concerns. 

Deepseek emerged in mid-2023 and after successive model releases, it officially launched its Chatbot in January 2025. With its launch, the buzz was everywhere. People said it is better than ChatGPT, because it offers many features for free that ChatGPT charges for. NVIDIA’s market share fell 18%, which was the biggest fall in the US stock market. Donald Trump said, “It’s a wake-up call for industries that we need to be laser-focused on competing to win.” This success did not last long, as many countries raised concerns about data security, while the United States Navy instructed all its members not to use Deepseek for security and ethical concerns. 

But honestly, that’s a common bump on the road to success. When something grows and seeks the attention of such a large audience, it faces scrutiny. It’s a part of the challenge that every tech giant faces on the path to their dreams. DeepSeek is the first chatbot to challenge OpenAI this strongly. However, if countries are raising concerns about security, China should take responsible steps to address them and compete through innovation, not by raising doubts about data handling. This approach can benefit them with global trust and long-term success rather than relying on shortcuts.

Germany’s data protection commissioner has asked Apple and Google to remove Chinese AI startup DeepSeek from their app stores in the country due to concerns about data protection, following a similar crackdown elsewhere.

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