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Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates

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Mehr Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates offers timely and insightful coverage of the latest developments in the US-China technology competition. This regularly updated podcast explores the critical areas of cybersecurity incidents, new tech restrictions, and policy changes, shedding light on the industry impacts and strategic implications for both nations. Featuring expert analysis and future forecasts, Beijing Bytes provides listeners with a clear understanding of the ongoing tech rivalry and its global significance, making it essential listening for anyone interested in the intersection of technology and international relations. For more info go to https://www.quietplease.ai Check out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

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Episode Tea Time with Tyrants: How Xi and Putin Are Building a Silicon Iron Curtain While DC Panics Over AI Leaks Cover

Tea Time with Tyrants: How Xi and Putin Are Building a Silicon Iron Curtain While DC Panics Over AI Leaks

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. I’m Alexandra Reeves, and this is Beijing Bytes, your quick dive into the US‑China tech war. Let’s start in Beijing, where the Trump–Xi summit has just wrapped. Analysts at CSIS and Johns Hopkins say the meeting technically “stabilized” relations, but the tech rivalry is still running hot. There was no breakthrough on export controls or AI, just a fragile pause while both sides keep re‑arming in cyberspace and semiconductors. At almost the same moment, Xi Jinping sat down with Vladimir Putin in Beijing for what Chinese state media called “tea diplomacy.” The Kremlin is pushing a joint declaration on a multipolar world and a “new type of international relations.” Buried in that diplomatic language is a clear tech message: Russia and China want to build alternative stacks in chips, cloud, and AI infrastructure to route around US pressure. Forty‑plus documents are on the table, and Russian officials are openly talking about co‑developing next‑gen networks and expanding cross‑border data links. Back in Washington, US lawmakers are zeroing in on AI exports. South China Morning Post reports that House Foreign Affairs chair Brian Mast warned that selling cutting‑edge AI systems to China could “make America the loser” in this race. That’s political code for tighter controls coming on model weights, accelerator chips, and foundation model APIs. For US firms like Nvidia, Intel, and the big cloud providers, this means more red lines, more licensing, and shrinking access to China’s massive data‑hungry market. Industry is already feeling it. ThinkChina notes that Beijing is doubling down on self‑reliance, using big Boeing and agriculture deals with Donald Trump as political cover while quietly channeling capital into domestic chip fabs, industrial AI, and sovereign cloud. The message from Zhongnanhai to Chinese tech companies is blunt: assume US tech can be cut off at any time. Cybersecurity is the shadow battlefield. While the last two weeks haven’t seen a single headline‑grabbing “worm of the decade,” security analysts tracking US‑China probes are seeing more stealthy campaigns: low‑noise intrusions into supply chains, telecom backbones, and AI research environments. Each side is mapping the other’s critical infrastructure, preparing options that fall short of open cyber war but could be activated during a Taiwan or South China Sea crisis. Strategically, Yan Xuetong at Tsinghua forecasts a long period of “intense but managed” competition: no direct war, but constant contest in cyberspace, AI standards bodies, rare‑earths, and data flows. The forecast over the next 12 to 24 months: more export controls from Washington, more indigenous innovation subsidies from Beijing, expanded Russia–China tech links, and a world where third countries in Europe and Southeast Asia are forced to choose which stack they plug into. That’s it for this edition of Beijing Bytes. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe for the next update on the US‑China tech war. This has been a quiet please production, for more check out quiet please dot ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta

20. Mai 2026 - 4 min
Episode China's Getting Blocked: Why Your iPhone Might Soon Cost More and Beijing Is Big Mad About It Cover

China's Getting Blocked: Why Your iPhone Might Soon Cost More and Beijing Is Big Mad About It

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with your Beijing Bytes update on the escalating US-China tech war. Things have gotten intense over the past 48 hours, and the implications are massive for both nations. Let's start with what just happened. The Federal Communications Commission voted unanimously Thursday to bar all Chinese laboratories from testing electronic devices destined for the US market. We're talking smartphones, cameras, computers—everything. Currently, about 75 percent of all US electronics are tested in China, so this is a seismic shift. The FCC is streamlining approval for devices tested in American labs or facilities in reciprocal countries instead. FCC Chair Brendan Carr framed this as securing networks from what he called bad actors. But that's just the beginning. In a separate three-to-zero vote, the commission advanced a proposal to formally bar China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom from operating data centers within the US. They're also prohibiting American carriers from interconnecting with companies on the national security Covered List, effectively cutting these firms off from the American internet ecosystem entirely. Here's where it gets strategic. The same day, the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission held a hearing titled Taking a Bigger Byte: China's Expanding Strategy for Data Dominance. Joseph Lin, CEO of Twenty, a cyber warfare company, told the commission that China isn't merely stealing data—it's building an AI-enabled intelligence and targeting architecture for economic competition, political coercion, and wartime advantage. Lin emphasized that China has assembled an ecosystem enabling industrial-scale cyber operations, drawing on its military, contractors, hacker-for-hire firms, and commercial technology companies. The concerning part? According to experts testifying before Congress, the United States is treating this challenge far too defensively while China treats data as a strategic resource with clear wartime applications, especially regarding Taiwan contingencies. Meanwhile, a new report from the Silverado Policy Accelerator warns that America is becoming increasingly dependent on China for critical display technology used in smartphones, televisions, and military systems. They're recommending targeted tariffs under Section 301 investigations to encourage supply chain diversification. The broader picture shows Washington moving from reactive bans to proactive restructuring of entire tech supply chains and testing infrastructure. This represents a fundamental decoupling strategy that will reshape global electronics manufacturing for years to come. Thanks for tuning in to Beijing Bytes. Make sure you subscribe for more analysis on how this tech war reshapes markets and geopolitics. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https: This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

1. Mai 2026 - 3 min
Episode Zuck's Singapore AI Heist Gets Blocked: China Says Nice Try and Chips Get Choked in This Week's Tech Takedown Cover

Zuck's Singapore AI Heist Gets Blocked: China Says Nice Try and Chips Get Choked in This Week's Tech Takedown

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, I'm Alexandra Reeves with Beijing Bytes, your pulse on the US-China tech war. Over the past two weeks, tensions have spiked like a rogue algorithm gone haywire, with Beijing slamming the door on American AI ambitions and Washington tightening the screws on Chinese chips. Picture this: Mark Zuckerberg thought he'd scored a coup with Meta's $2 billion acquisition of Manus, the Singapore-based AI startup with Chinese roots, boasting agentic tech that codes apps, crunches market research, and whips up budgets autonomously. Announced back in December 2025, the deal had Manus employees—about 100 of them—already shuffling into Meta's Singapore offices by March, websites updated, investors paid out. But on April 27, China's National Development and Reform Commission dropped a one-line bombshell: deal blocked, unwind it now. Citing national security reviews, they prohibited the foreign takeover, even post-integration. Manus co-founders CEO Xiao Hong and Chief Scientist Ji Yichao had been barred from leaving China since March. Meta insists it complied with laws, but Beijing's message is crystal: no "Singapore-washing" for strategic AI—tech with Chinese DNA stays home. The Wall Street Journal reports this spooks entrepreneurs and investors, signaling Beijing's long regulatory arm. Not to be outdone, the US Commerce Department last week ordered chip giants like Lam Research, Applied Materials, and KLA to halt tool shipments to China's Hua Hong Semiconductor, the country's second-largest chipmaker, and possibly Huali too. Targeting facilities churning out advanced nodes for AI supremacy, this aims to choke Beijing's domestic chip drive and preserve America's edge. Sources say it could slow progress, though Hua Hong might pivot to non-US gear. Cyber fronts are heating up too. The Pentagon's unveiling "Cybercom 2.0," a massive overhaul to bolster the cyber workforce against China's AI-fueled military apps. Assistant Secretary Katherine Sutton warns adversaries exploit vulnerabilities fast, with lawmakers eyeing Beijing as the top long-term threat. No major breaches headlined, but US scrutiny ramps on China's Iran ties—sanctions hit a major Chinese refiner propping up Tehran's oil cash, with Treasury's Scott Bessent threatening secondary hits on banks. Ahead of a Trump-Xi summit next month, this mixes AI blocks with geopolitical jabs. Industry feels the quake: ByteDance got a compliance warning under China's tightened 2026 AI rules, mandating clear labels on generated text, images, and videos, plus better detection. New regs target foreign firms dodging US export controls or shifting supply chains. Experts like those at The Wire China see a tit-for-tat escalation, with China raising the AI stakes while the US guards semis. Strategically, this cements a bifurcated tech world—US leading in hardware curbs, China hoarding software smarts. Forecasts? More blocks, supply chain fracture This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.

29. Apr. 2026 - 4 min
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