Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates
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
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