Tech Shield: US vs China Updates
This is your Tech Shield: US vs China Updates podcast. Hey listeners, I’m Ting, your slightly overcaffeinated guide to all things China, cyber, and hacking, and this week’s Tech Shield story is very much US versus China in the shadows. Let’s start with Capitol Hill. According to Vision Times, a group of US lawmakers just warned that foreign influence campaigns, with a heavy side-eye at China, may be targeting the boom in American AI data centers. They’re worried that Chinese-linked entities could quietly shape where these massive facilities get built, who runs them, and what sort of network gear goes inside. That’s not just zoning drama; it’s about who sits closest to the firehose of AI training data and critical infrastructure. In response, US agencies are quietly tightening the bolts. Officials are pushing for more rigorous supply-chain vetting of power systems, cooling gear, and especially network hardware going into new data centers. Think of it as a zero-trust policy for concrete and fiber: if a component can route traffic or phone home, it gets scrutinized. Cyber teams at CISA and the Department of Energy have been issuing fresh advisories to utilities and cloud providers, urging them to treat any unfamiliar vendor in high-voltage or backbone networks as a potential foothold for Beijing’s hackers. At the same time, US defense and cloud contractors have been rolling out new patches to counter the kinds of exploits historically linked to Chinese groups like Volt Typhoon and APT41. These updates focus on edge devices, VPN appliances, and IoT controllers—exactly the stuff Chinese operators love to use as stealthy launchpads into more sensitive networks. Industry security teams are layering in continuous behavioral analytics, using AI to flag “that’s weird” traffic long before a human analyst would notice. Meanwhile, in Beijing, the State Council has introduced regulations that force Chinese tech firms to get national security approval before moving data, operations, or capital abroad, as reported by Inside Telecom. That effectively hardwires the party-state deeper into corporate decision-making. For US defenders, the message is clear: if you’re dealing with a Chinese vendor, assume the state has a seat at the backend. Here’s the expert take: these US moves are smart, necessary, and late. Vetting AI data center projects and hardening edge devices closes some of the juiciest attack paths. But there are gaps. Local governments hungry for jobs can still be outplayed by well-disguised shell companies. Smaller cloud and colocation providers don’t have the same threat intel muscle as the big hyperscalers. And as China tightens capital controls at home, it may rely even more on covert access and influence abroad. So, the US tech shield is getting thicker, but it’s still patchwork armor facing a very patient opponent. Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and don’t forget to subscribe. 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
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