Since then, multiple countries have warned that user data may not be properly protected, and in February a US cybersecurity company alleged potential data sharing, external between DeepSeek and ByteDance.
DeepSeek’s apparent overnight impact saw it shoot to the top of App Store charts in the UK, US and many other countries around the world – although it now sits far below ChatGPT in UK rankings.
In South Korea, it had been downloaded over a million times before being pulled from Apple and Google’s App Stores on Saturday evening.
Existing users can still access the app and use it on a web browser.
The data regulator, the Personal Information Protection Commission (PIPC), told South Korea’s Yonhap News Agency that despite finding a link between DeepSeek and ByteDance, it was “yet to confirm what data was transferred and to what extent”.
Critics of the Chinese state have long argued its National Intelligence Law allows the government to access any data it wants from Chinese companies.
However, ByteDance, headquartered in Beijing, is owned by a number of global investors – and others say the same law allows for the protection of private companies and personal data.
Fears over user data being sent to China was one of the reasons the US Supreme Court upheld a ban on TikTok, which is owned by ByteDance.
The US ban is on hold until 5 April as President Donald Trump attempts to broker a resolution.