Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates
This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. I’m Ting, and the last two weeks in the U.S.-China tech war have looked less like a clean chess match and more like a live-fire software update with geopolitics attached. Washington kept tightening the screws on advanced chips, AI supply chains, and outbound investment screening, while Beijing answered with its familiar playbook: tighter oversight, sharper industrial policy, and a louder push for self-reliance in semiconductors, AI, and cyber capabilities.[4][9] On cybersecurity, the big story is not one flashy breach but the continued drumbeat of state-linked intrusion activity and infrastructure hardening. U.S. officials and security researchers have kept warning that Chinese cyber operations remain focused on long-term access, espionage, and potential pre-positioning against critical systems, especially telecom, cloud, and energy targets. That matters because in a tech war, stealing a roadmap can be cheaper than building the factory.[8] At the same time, Beijing has been emphasizing information security and digital sovereignty, which in practice means more control, more scrutiny, and less room for foreign tech to roam freely.[4][9] The policy front has been even busier. The United States has continued refining restrictions on the export of advanced AI chips, chipmaking tools, and sensitive know-how, aiming to slow China’s progress in frontier computing and military-relevant applications.[4][9] China, for its part, has reportedly tightened oversight of overseas investment and capital moving into strategic sectors, a move designed to keep domestic technology from leaking out while also shielding its industrial champions from external pressure.[4] That is classic containment versus insulation: one side tries to deny inputs, the other tries to lock down outputs. Industry has felt the squeeze. U.S. rules continue to complicate global supply chains for companies like Nvidia, AMD, and major semiconductor equipment vendors, while Chinese firms are being pushed harder to source locally and redesign products around domestic components.[4][9] The result is a more fragmented tech ecosystem, with companies forced to build one roadmap for Washington, another for Beijing, and a headache for everyone else. The message from both capitals is clear: the era of frictionless cross-border tech is over. Strategically, the competition is drifting from decoupling in name to selective decoupling in practice. Expert analysis suggests the U.S. is trying to preserve a lead in frontier AI and chip design, while China is betting that scale, state support, and speed of substitution can blunt the pressure over time.[4][9] The near-term forecast is more controls, more cyber espionage accusations, and more industrial policy on both sides. In other words, listeners, this is not cooling down; it is becoming the new operating system. Thanks for tuning in, and make sure 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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