
Why does DeepSeek say “Sorry, I cannot answer that” nearly half the time?
In this episode, we break down DeepSeek’s now-infamous “Sorry” policy — the built-in censorship mechanism that forces China’s leading AI model to refuse answering 45% of politically sensitive questions, especially those related to Falun Gong, Tibet, Taiwan, and human rights issues.
Our guest walks us through hands-on experiments where DeepSeek began answering normally, only to suddenly delete its own response and overwrite it with an apology the moment “banned keywords” were detected — revealing a hidden kill-switch layer overriding the model’s actual reasoning output .
We explore:
How DeepSeek’s front-end censorship layer actively blocks answers the model wants to give
Why these keyword controls exist — and why they reflect CCP intervention, not technical limitation
The political reality inside Chinese tech companies: party committees embedded inside businesses of 10+ employees
How this structure ensures every major AI company is tightly integrated with state power and surveillance systems
Why DeepSeek users — even outside China — are unknowingly subjected to political filtering, data risk, and narrative manipulation
The interview also exposes broader threats:
How Chinese apps and cloud services leak user data back to Chinese authorities
Real cases of harassment, death threats, and infiltration against human rights researchers documented over decades
Why the CCP fears uncensored information — and how controlling AI outputs helps maintain political stability
What students, developers, and everyday users must understand before relying on AI tools with opaque political agendas
If you've ever wondered why DeepSeek apologizes so often — and what those “Sorry” messages are really hiding — this episode pulls back the curtain.
Knowledge protects. Awareness empowers.
