A collective of Australia’s leading universities, known as the Group of Eight (Go8), has blocked staff and students from using the Chinese-owned artificial intelligence app DeepSeek.
“AI is a technology full of potential and opportunity—but the government will not hesitate to act when our agencies identify a national security risk,” he said.
“The Group is 100 percent committed to protecting sensitive research and data, and will continue to update policies and procedures to navigate the rapidly changing landscape of technology and artificial intelligence,” Go8 stated in a Facebook post, quoting Chief Executive Vicki Thomson.
Safeguarding Billions in Research Funding and Innovation
The Go8 includes the University of Melbourne, Monash University, the University of Adelaide, the University of Western Australia, the Australian National University, the University of Sydney, UNSW Sydney, and the University of Queensland.The group claims its graduates account for more than half of Australia’s doctors, dentists, and vets, along with 54 percent of science graduates and more than 40 percent of engineering graduates.
The ban aligns with similar actions taken by other countries and mirrors previous bans on high-risk apps like TikTok. Other major institutions have also blocked DeepSeek from their internal systems, including federally owned corporations such as NBN Co, the ABC, and Australia Post.
The country’s second-largest telecommunications company, Optus, has also restricted access, while Telstra, the largest, has opted to limit staff use. Instead, it announced last month that it would invest $700 million in a joint venture with Accenture to develop its own large language model AI.
Go8 Graduate Involved in DeepSeek’s Development
Despite the ban, a Go8 graduate played a role in DeepSeek’s development.Zizheng Pan, an alumnus of two Go8 universities, completed a Master’s in computer science at the University of Adelaide in 2020 and gained a PhD in the same discipline at Monash four years later.