jilibay-jilibay casino-jilibay games

MANILA, Philippines The Armed Forces of the Philippines (AFP) signified on Tuesday its willingness to revisit existing policies on the use of technology for operational matters amid the continuous rise of artificial intelligence, speci

jilibay-jilibay casino-jilibay games

Hotline:

jilibay-jilibay casino-jilibay games

bonus365 DeepSeek: AFP willing to review policies on using Chinese chatbot

Views:101Updated:2025-02-13 09:38

MANILA, Philippines — The Armed Forces of the Philippines  (AFP) signified on Tuesday its willingness to revisit existing policies on the use of technology for operational matters amid the continuous rise of artificial intelligence, specifically Chinese chatbot DeepSeek.

At the meeting of the Commission on Appointment panel on national defense on Tuesday, Rep. Marvey Mariño asked if the AFP intended to regulate the use of AI or ban its use.

Article continues after this advertisement

“How do you guide the military on which and what to type in that information? The more you type into it, the more it learns about everything about our nation. So they actually don’t have to go to the Philippines to understand and get information. I guess that’s my question — for me to understand whether we will regulate the use or we will ban the use such as what they did in Taiwan,” said Mariño.

FEATURED STORIES GLOBALNATION China denies hacking phone of PH envoy to US GLOBALNATION Crews return to Potomac River to recover wreckage from midair collision GLOBALNATION Baby face obsession: Why South Koreans strive to look younger

READ: Italy’s data watchdog restricts China’s DeepSeek, opens probe

This was seconded by Rep. Luis Raymund Villafuerte Jr., who insisted that Taiwan, for an instance, had already banned the use of DeepSeek because of security risks.

Article continues after this advertisement

“I think the AFP has to seriously consider what Taiwan has done because as you know, we have a conflict with China right now and if you take this lightly and act later, it might be detrimental to our security,” Villafuerte said.

Article continues after this advertisement

“For security considerations, just in case you decide to ban DeepSeek, it’s no loss to the country. But if we don’t consider —  I’m not saying you ban it — but if you don’t consider, it might be a security risk,” he emphasized.

Article continues after this advertisement

At the end of their probe, it was the turn of the AFP appointee to the rank of Brigadier General Constancio Espina II.

According to Espina, the AFP was “seriously considering these kinds of technology, especially that it can be used against [Filipinos].”

Article continues after this advertisement

“My point was the fact that it’s not just DeepSeek but other technologies that we are using — that we need to use it with caution and then we need to not put it matters that will be detrimental to our national security,” Espina said.

“So in the AFP, we are prohibiting our soldiers, officers, and men to use this technology to upload confidential information, information that [is] of national security — these are prohibited in the AFP,” he added.

Later in the meeting, Mariño asked if the AFP already issued a policy prohibiting Filipino soldiers and personnel from downloading DeepSeek.

“The DeepSeek is new, but we already have a policy on social media and other technologies that we are not allowed to upload confidential matters,” Espina answered.

But Mariño argued that the policy was universal for all emerging AI technologies. He then particularly noted that with DeepSeek, China could manipulate the information over time.

“So the story can change for somebody who gets information from DeepSeek. Five years from now it’s a different story,” Mariño pointed out.

“That’s why we don’t wanna put information and enrich this AI company so that they can later on use it against us…… So that is the bottom line of what I’m asking whether you should or not create a policy for I guess military personnel to not download deepseek or any AI that will be detrimental to national security,” he added.

“Lalahatin ko na ho. Una, hindi ho pinagsasamantalahan ng DSWD ‘yung pondo ng DSWD — para sa taumbayan ho ‘yan. We agree with that.

Following this, the lawmaker pressed Espina to answer whether or not the AFP would issue a new policy or study its existing ones.

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again. Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

SIGN ME UP

By providing an email address. I agree to the Terms of Use and acknowledge that I have read the Privacy Policy.

Espina answered in the affirmative.

“Yes, sirbonus365, definitely. Because of that new technology, there might be some revisions on existing policies of AFP preventing us from using all of these technologies for operational matters and matters of national security,” he said.

play777 casino READ NEXT Paris, the village of light in Kyrgyzstan’s rugged mount... 2 Liberians nabbed in Quezon City for P1.86-M ‘black dollar�... EDITORS' PICK Family of police officer killed in DC plane crash arrives in US, assisted by PH Embassy Olivia Rodrigo stuns in backless Versace gown at Grammys 2025 KBL: Kevin Quiambao plays best game yet, scores 36 for Sono Gov’t ends 2024 with P16.05 trillion debt pile QCPD: Crime in QC district down by 14.12 percent What can you do if you’ve been falsely accused MOST READ Surveys put 1Pacman in top tier of preferred partylists Ten things to know about the late Barbie Hsu’s life Lacuna hit for special permit requirement for events in Manila BSP eyes shift away from OTPs to fight fraud Follow @FMangosingINQ on Twitter --> View comments