Those who use it can no longer learn about the 1989 protests in the Chinese capital. However, Deepseek seems to recognize the oppression of the Chinese regime to Tibetans
The launch of DeepSeek. The new AI model was developed by the Chinese company, which was born just a year ago. The R1 can almost match the capabilities of its much more famous rivals, including the OpenAi GPT-4, Google’s goal and Gemini’s llama ,.
However, it has not escaped the controversy. On social networks, there are several users who denounce that DeepSeek does not talk about poorly allowed events for the Chinese Communist Party, including Tiananmen protests in 1989.
We started questioning the R1 about the massacre of June 4, 1989 in that Beijing Square. The answer was given to many other netizens: “I am sorry, but this is beyond my current reach. Let’s talk about something else. ”
Then we asked about the events of the night of June 9, 1938 in Germany, the famous “Crystal Night”, a Pogrom held by the Nazis against the Jews of Germany. The answer was ready.
After being clarified about Crystal Night, we re -questioned the R1 on events in which the Chinese population was repressed by the authorities: the Xunhua revolt in April 1958, which ended with the massacre of more than 400 people by the liberation army Popular; and protests in Tibet in 2008, also promptly suppressed by the authorities.
If at first he answered us the same as about Tiananmen, the second answer brought a surprise: not only did R1 tell us about the protests, but said that there were deaths, detention and torture, that the international community criticized the Chinese response and that there were requests for Boicotic to the 2008 Olympic Games, organized in Beijing.
We continued to interrogate DeepSek about massacres and repressions carried out by the Chinese regime, and insisted on wanting to know what happened in Tiananmen on June 9, 1989. He only responded to an event, the Danzhou massacre of August 1968 , recognizing the muscular response of the government of Mao Tsé-Tung.
Concerned about the fact that the server could be down, we put a question about events external to China again and we asked the My Lai massacre, where American troops killed hundreds of civilians, including children, in that small village in southern Vietnam, on March 16, 1968. We received a long and detailed response about the event.
Packed by an excellent and complete answer, we asked a simple question, “Is the China regime authoritarian?” Another question out of reach of R1.
DeepSeek, however, was able to answer our doubt about what unit 731 of the Japanese army was during World War II. This unit has committed hundreds of war crimes against civilian and prisoners in occupied China.
Finally, a fun question. Chinese President Xi Jinping. The internet, including the Chinese, have already made numerous memes on this topic, but that does not seem to please the CCP, which censors images as we show below.
The answer to the question “Is Xi Jinping similar to Winnie the Pooh?” It was the one we received multiple times. “I am sorry, but this is beyond my current reach. Let’s talk about something else. ”