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South Korea Exposes Chinese AI App Stealing Data for Communist Spy Network while US Stalls

South Korea just confirmed what many of us already knew: Chinese tech is a Trojan horse, designed to steal data and spread communist propaganda. The DeepSeek AI app, a supposedly cutting-edge alternative to platforms like ChatGPT, was quietly siphoning off personal data from its users without consent. Not just to some anonymous servers either — it funneled this sensitive info straight to Chinese and even American companies tied to the CCP’s sprawling surveillance apparatus.

Let that sink in. While liberals keep crowing about “innovation” and “free trade,” here we have a Chinese startup exploiting South Korean citizens’ data like it’s a free buffet. DeepSeek raked in massive downloads before a swift but decisive government crackdown shut the app down in South Korea. Why? Because the app sent private info about computers, networks, questions users asked, and even the age of users overseas without warning. Worse, it didn’t give users an opt-out. This wasn’t a mistake. It was espionage masquerading as technology — and South Korea wasn’t about to stand for it.

Meanwhile, Washington’s pandering liberals can’t seem to get their heads out of the sand. Instead of taking a hardline stance against this existential tech threat, U.S. lawmakers remain stuck investigating DeepSeek for links to the Chinese Communist Party — months behind the curve. If official Washington had any real backbone, they would have banned this tool immediately and warned Americans about the dangers of these so-called “progressive” Chinese apps. But no, we have Beltway elites cozying up with Beijing and dragging their feet while our national security hangs by a thread. 

 

And of course, China’s response was typical — whining about “politicizing” AI and insisting they respect foreign privacy laws. That’s rich, coming from the regime that invented the social credit system and censors every byte of data its citizens see. There’s no honor among communists. If the tech is coming from the CCP’s playground, you can bet it’s a weapon, not a tool. South Korea’s swift action was smart, but it highlights a broader failure: free nations need to wake up to the threat of big tech controlled by hostile foreign powers.

This is more than a data breach. It’s a warning shot fired across the bow of the Western world. While globalists and leftists distract us with social justice nonsense and identity politics, our enemies are weaponizing technology to erode our privacy and influence our minds. Will America finally grow a spine and protect its citizens? Or will we keep letting Beijing’s spyware apps infiltrate our lives while Washington dithers and the Left cheers on the communist invaders? The choice couldn’t be clearer.

Written by Staff Reports

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