Italy closes probe into DeepSeek after commitments to warn of AI 'hallucination' risks


A DeepSeek AI sign is seen at a building where the Chinese start-up's office is located in Beijing, China, February 19, 2025. REUTERS/Florence Lo

ROME, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Italy’s ‌antitrust authority has ended an ‌investigation into the Chinese AI system ‌DeepSeek for allegedly failing to warn users that it may produce false information, agreeing to binding ‍commitments as a condition for ‍closing the case.

The ‌Italian regulator, known as the AGCM, which ‍also ​polices consumer rights, had launched the investigation last June.

The decision ⁠was announced in the AGCM's regular weekly ‌bulletin published on Monday.

The commitments proposed by ⁠Hangzhou DeepSeek ‍Artificial Intelligence and Beijing DeepSeek Artificial Intelligence, which jointly own and operate DeepSeek, ‍consist of a package of ‌measures aimed at improving disclosures about the risk of 'hallucinations' - situations in which, based on a given input from a user, the AI model generates one or more outputs containing inaccurate, misleading, or fabricated information.

"The ‌commitments presented by DeepSeek make disclosures about the risk of hallucinations easier, more transparent, ​intelligible, and immediate," the AGCM bulletin said.

(Reporting by Cristina CarlevaroEditing by Claudia Cristoferi and Keith Weir)

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