Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates

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

3 min · 1 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio China's Getting Blocked: Why Your iPhone Might Soon Cost More and Beijing Is Big Mad About It

Descripción

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.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

261 episodios

Portada del episodio Chips, Spies, and Supply Chain Lies: How Trump's Taiwan Blast Just Made Tech War Way More Expensive

Chips, Spies, and Supply Chain Lies: How Trump's Taiwan Blast Just Made Tech War Way More Expensive

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. I’m Ting, and in the last two weeks the U.S.–China tech chessboard has gotten sharper, louder, and a lot more expensive. The biggest headline is Washington’s renewed pressure on semiconductor supply chains, with President Donald Trump blasting Taiwan for, in his words, “stealing” America’s chip industry and again pushing for more chip manufacturing to move back to the United States, according to posts reported by the Associated Press via social platforms and quoted in the coverage. That matters because Taiwan is still the beating heart of advanced chipmaking, so every tariff threat or reshoring pledge lands like a cyber-flashbang in Shenzhen, Taipei, and Silicon Valley. On the cyber front, the tension is not just about factories; it’s about control. The latest public reporting shows the rivalry still centered on AI chips, export controls, and the question of whether U.S. sanctions are actually slowing China’s artificial intelligence progress. The answer from many analysts is “partly, but not enough,” because China keeps adapting through domestic substitutes, gray-market sourcing, and aggressive state support for local innovation, a theme echoed in recent media commentary about the AI sanctions debate. Beijing, for its part, is signaling resilience and systems-level confidence. China’s June 17 white paper on global governance frames the tech struggle as part of a broader fight over who gets to write the rules of the digital age, not just who ships the fastest chips. That is classic Beijing: when the hardware road gets blocked, the policy road gets wider. There’s also a quieter but very revealing national-security angle. ProPublica reported that before the SpaceX IPO, investors with ties to mainland China, Hong Kong, and Russia acquired stakes through a U.S. middleman firm, showing how sensitive aerospace and dual-use tech can still attract foreign capital even under intense scrutiny. That is exactly the kind of supply-chain-and-security overlap that keeps U.S. agencies awake at night. The industry impact is immediate. U.S. firms want certainty, but they are getting export controls, tariff threats, and fragmented markets. Chinese firms are getting pushed harder toward self-reliance in chips, AI models, and strategic materials. Europe is also watching nervously, with new rare-earth recycling efforts showing how the whole world is trying to reduce dependence on China’s mineral leverage, especially for EVs and advanced manufacturing. My forecast? Expect more targeted U.S. controls on AI hardware, more Chinese policy support for domestic chips and software stacks, and more cybersecurity spillover as both sides probe each other’s infrastructure and supply chains. The endgame is not a clean decoupling; it is a messy, high-cost techno-nationalist arms race where both Washington and Beijing are trying to deny the other side strategic surprise. Thanks for tuning in, and please 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

Ayer3 min
Portada del episodio Chips, Spies and Cloud Goodbyes: How Beijing and DC Are Breaking Up the Internet One License at a Time

Chips, Spies and Cloud Goodbyes: How Beijing and DC Are Breaking Up the Internet One License at a Time

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with your Beijing Bytes download on the US–China tech war, and it’s been a spicy couple of weeks in cyberspace. Let’s start in Washington, where the Biden administration just tightened screws on China’s access to advanced AI chips and cloud computing. Commerce Department officials quietly expanded rules so that even AI training done through US cloud providers like Amazon and Microsoft may require licenses for Chinese clients. Policy folks at the Hoover Institution say this is part of a broader “talent and compute chokehold” strategy aimed straight at firms like Chinese AI champion DeepSeek, which relies heavily on overseas expertise and infrastructure. Beijing’s answer? Two tracks: public calm, private countermeasures. Chinese regulators have been nudging big platforms like Alibaba Cloud and Huawei Cloud to push “de-Americanized” stacks, from homegrown GPUs to indigenous databases. State-linked analysts in Beijing frame it as a “second great firewall,” this time around critical hardware and AI foundation models instead of just websites. On the cybersecurity front, US agencies have been busy naming and shaming. According to recent briefings summarized by US cybersecurity firms, a Chinese state-linked group commonly dubbed Volt Typhoon has shifted from quiet prepositioning in US critical infrastructure to more aggressive credential theft probes against telecom and cloud providers. Incident responders say the pattern looks like long-term battle prep, not smash-and-grab ransomware. China’s CERT teams, meanwhile, accuse the US National Security Agency of running new implants against routers in East Asia, echoing past leaks about the NSA’s “Shotgiant”-style operations. Chinese media point to these disclosures to argue that Washington is the real cyber aggressor, reinforcing domestic support for “secure and controllable” tech. Zoom out to industry impact: American chipmakers and tool vendors are feeling whiplash. Executives at major semiconductor companies warn that ever-tighter export rules risk pushing Chinese customers permanently toward local alternatives, accelerating firms like SMIC and Biren. At the same time, European and Asian allies are being pulled into the fight; G7 leaders meeting in Évian-les-Bains, France, are already debating coordinated tariff and tech measures on China, with France especially vocal about overcapacity in everything from EV batteries to networking gear, as reported by InvestingLive. Strategically, experts in both Washington and Beijing now talk less about “decoupling” and more about “weaponized interdependence.” Supply chains are still intertwined, but every shared system—cloud, chips, cables—has become a potential pressure point or backdoor. US strategists forecast a world of fragmented AI ecosystems: a dollar-and-NVIDIA bloc versus a digital yuan-and-Huawei sphere. Chinese scholars counter that overreach by the US could fracture Western unity and open room for Beijing to court the Global South with cheaper, sanctioned-resistant tech. My forecast for you: more covert cyber jockeying against undersea cables, data centers, and satellites; narrower but more lethal export bans on AI accelerators; and a branding war where both sides pitch their tech stacks as the “trusted” one to swing states from Jakarta to Nairobi. That’s your Beijing Bytes for today. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so Ting can keep hacking through the noise for you. 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

17 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Alibaba Gets Blacklisted, ByteDance Goes Chip Shopping, and Why Your Cloud Might Be a Battlefield

Alibaba Gets Blacklisted, ByteDance Goes Chip Shopping, and Why Your Cloud Might Be a Battlefield

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your resident Beijing-bytes-obsessed cyber nerd, and the last two weeks of the US–China tech war have been…spicy. Let’s start with Washington. According to the Economic Times, the US just expanded its list of Chinese firms tied to Beijing’s military, slapping names like Alibaba, Baidu, and a major chipmaker onto a Pentagon-linked roster. That means more compliance headaches for US investors, more de‑risking pressure on Wall Street, and a louder message to Beijing that “civil‑military fusion” is now a financial liability, not just a slogan. On the chip front, Reuters reports that ByteDance has been in talks with Chinese chip designer Iluvatar CoreX to buy domestic AI accelerators as US export controls keep tightening. That’s your classic sanctions side‑quest: Washington squeezes Nvidia’s high‑end GPUs, and suddenly Shenzhen and Shanghai fabs become national-security assets. The industry read here is simple: expect a bifurcated AI stack—US‑aligned clouds on one side, China‑centric chips and frameworks on the other. Cyber has been the quiet drumbeat underneath all this. While officials are tight‑lipped, security researchers on both sides of the Pacific have flagged more probing of cloud management consoles and software supply chains—low‑noise, high‑impact intrusion routes. The strategic implication: both Washington and Beijing are preparing for a world where turning off someone’s data center might matter more than sinking a ship. Meanwhile, policy folks are trying to look like adults in the room. The Wire China describes how US and Chinese officials, after their recent summit in Beijing, signaled interest in building “guardrails” for frontier AI, including autonomous weapons and misuse of open‑source models by non‑state hackers. That’s the diplomatic equivalent of saying, “We’ll still fight—but maybe not with Skynet.” Around the ecosystem, Asia Society is literally holding an event titled “Do Export Controls Work? U.S.–China Tech Competition at a Crossroads,” which tells you everything about the mood in DC and New York. Investors are gaming scenarios where stricter controls hit short‑term profits but lock in a long‑term US lead, while Instagram‑friendly analysts at firms like Anthropic argue Washington could keep a 12‑ to 24‑month edge if it doubles down on controls and domestic AI deployment. For Beijing, the playbook is clear: accelerate indigenous chips, court the Global South with cheaper infrastructure, and quietly harden networks for the next round of cyber sparring. For Washington, it’s about alliances, standards, and making sure the world’s critical code doesn’t all compile in Shanghai. Alright listeners, that’s your download on Beijing Bytes for this round. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss the next exploit. 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

15 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Beijing Bytes: Alibaba Gets Pentagon Listed While ChatGPT Catches Chinese Meme Farms Red-Handed

Beijing Bytes: Alibaba Gets Pentagon Listed While ChatGPT Catches Chinese Meme Farms Red-Handed

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with your latest dose of Beijing Bytes, where the US‑China tech war is less “trade spat” and more “patch Tuesday, forever.” Let’s jack straight into the last two weeks. First big move: Washington just expanded its list of Chinese companies tagged as having ties to the People’s Liberation Army, adding heavyweights like Alibaba, Baidu, and BYD, along with a major chipmaker, according to the Economic Times and other business outlets. The Pentagon list doesn’t ban them outright, but it scares off investors, blocks defense contracts, and paints a big “dual‑use risk” label on some of China’s most important tech champions. Beijing’s Commerce Ministry blasted the move as “unjustified suppression” of Chinese enterprises and a violation of understandings reached at the last Trump–Xi summit, accusing Washington of “abusing national security” language to kneecap Chinese innovation. Cyber front next, because that’s where things get spicy. OpenAI recently published a report describing China‑based influence operations using ChatGPT from late 2025 into this year to generate English‑language posts and memes aimed at US audiences. According to that report, one campaign, nicknamed “Data Center Bandwagon,” pushed the narrative that American AI data centers were secretly jacking up electricity bills for US households, complete with comics and social posts crafted to look grassroots and very “Midwestern uncle on Facebook.” Another cluster attacked US tariffs and tech controls, carefully steering around any mention of Xi Jinping. OpenAI says the campaigns largely flopped in engagement terms, but they show how both AI and psychology are now battlefield tools in the tech war. Those two stories connect to the broader policy shift: in Washington, there’s growing momentum to treat advanced AI, chips, and cloud as strategic infrastructure on par with telecom backbones. That means more outbound investment screening, more export controls on AI accelerators and EDA tools, and likely new rules on Americans working for sensitive Chinese labs. On the Chinese side, policymakers are doubling down on “self‑reliance in core technologies,” pushing domestic chip fabs, operating systems, and large language models to reduce exposure to US chokepoints. Industry impact? If you’re Alibaba or Baidu, being labeled a “military company” raises compliance costs globally and makes partnerships with US or EU firms way harder. For US cloud and chip companies, the short‑term win is locking Chinese rivals out of certain markets; the long‑term risk is accelerating a fully separate Chinese tech stack that no one in Silicon Valley gets to sell into. Strategically, both capitals are betting that whoever controls compute, data, and networks controls the future balance of power. US strategists see restricting Chinese access as buying time; Chinese strategists see it as proof that only a sovereign, end‑to‑end supply chain is safe. My forecast: more narrow, targeted restrictions are coming on AI training compute, semiconductor tools, and maybe even certain cross‑border data flows. Cyber ops will lean harder on AI‑generated content but stay deniable and deniable‑ish. Expect two partially decoupled ecosystems, with countries from Southeast Asia to the EU pressured to choose sides, at least on critical infrastructure. That’s it for this burst of Beijing Bytes. I’m Ting, thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next zero‑day in geopolitics. 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

14 de jun de 20263 min
Portada del episodio Silicon Cold War Heats Up: China's Spy Animals, ChatGPT Propaganda, and the Battle for AI's Soul

Silicon Cold War Heats Up: China's Spy Animals, ChatGPT Propaganda, and the Battle for AI's Soul

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Ting here, and the US-China tech war has had a very busy couple of weeks: part policy knife fight, part cyber shadowboxing, part industrial chess match. On the cybersecurity front, OpenAI said it uncovered China-linked influence activity that used ChatGPT to generate posts pushing narratives about AI infrastructure, electricity costs, and tariffs, which is a sharp reminder that the fight is no longer only about chips and code, but also about who shapes the story around them.[1] At the same time, Beijing has been leaning harder into the security frame. China’s Ministry of State Security warned that foreign intelligence services are using sensor-equipped animals, wave gliders, buoys, and cargo-ship devices to collect marine data and map coastal vulnerabilities, signaling that China sees the espionage contest expanding from servers and semiconductors into the undersea domain.[7] That matters because the US-China competition now reaches critical infrastructure, maritime sensing, and dual-use data collection, not just classic hacking. On the policy side, the broad trend is escalation through control. Recent reporting points to intensified debate in Washington over how to regulate frontier AI models, with experts warning that the trade-off between innovation and security is getting harder to manage.[2] In parallel, reporting this week also points to Beijing’s continued push for massive AI and data-center capacity expansion, a sign that China is trying to build domestic compute resilience even as US export controls constrain access to advanced technology.[4] That combination creates a familiar pattern: the United States tries to slow sensitive capability transfer, while China responds by accelerating self-reliance. Industry impacts are already visible. The AI infrastructure race is raising questions about electricity demand, data-center siting, and supply chains, while influence operations and cyber concerns are forcing companies to treat narrative warfare as a real business risk.[1] The most important strategic implication is that both sides are now competing on three fronts at once: compute, standards, and trust. The United States still holds major advantages in frontier AI ecosystems and allied coordination, but China is narrowing gaps through scale, state direction, and rapid adaptation.[11] My forecast? Expect tighter US export enforcement, more AI-content attribution battles, and louder Chinese claims about foreign cyber-espionage. In plain English: fewer surprises in hardware, more chaos in information operations, and a tech relationship that keeps looking less like trade friction and more like a permanent cold war in silicon. Thank you for tuning in, 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

12 de jun de 20263 min