Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates

Chip Wars Heat Up: Why Beijing and Washington Are Playing Digital Keep-Away With Your Next iPhone Brain

3 min · 7 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Chip Wars Heat Up: Why Beijing and Washington Are Playing Digital Keep-Away With Your Next iPhone Brain

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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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256 episodios

episode Silicon Showdown: Pentagon Blacklists Alibaba While Everyone Still Begs China for Magnets artwork

Silicon Showdown: Pentagon Blacklists Alibaba While Everyone Still Begs China for Magnets

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here in your ears with the latest Beijing Bytes on the US‑China tech war, and wow, the last couple of weeks have been spicy on the silicon battlefield. Let’s start with Washington. According to Asia-focused outlet The Asia Cable, the Pentagon just expanded its 1260H “China military-linked firms” list to include big names like Alibaba, Baidu, and BYD, tightening the screws on how US defense money can touch Chinese tech champions. That means no Pentagon contracts and a giant compliance headache for any US company still dreaming of joint cloud, AI, or EV projects with those firms. InvestingLive reports this came alongside US pressure on Beijing over rare earths, asking China to resume exports to Japan to keep advanced supply chains from seizing up. That’s the tech-war version of “we don’t like you, but we still really need your magnets.” Beijing, predictably, is not amused. Chinese state-linked commentary blasted the blacklist as weaponized industrial policy, framing Alibaba and Baidu as purely commercial while Washington paints them as dual‑use tech suppliers. On Chinese social platforms, nationalist influencers are spinning this as proof that the US is trying to “contain” China’s AI and EV rise, which only hardens support for homegrown chips, cloud, and operating systems. Cyber has been just as busy. US cybersecurity analysts quoted in recent think‑tank briefings say there’s been an uptick in Chinese state‑linked phishing and zero‑day probing against US defense contractors and semiconductor firms, especially those dealing in AI accelerators and lithography gear. On the flip side, Chinese security blogs are accusing US and allied agencies of ramping up intrusions into Chinese telecom backbones and cloud providers in search of data on AI training corpora and 5G core networks. No one’s clean here; it’s mutual reconnaissance at scale. Policy-wise, US lawmakers are again floating tighter export controls on advanced AI chips and EDA tools, with some proposals to limit outbound US investment into Chinese quantum, biotech, and AI firms. According to US‑China policy newsletters like The Monitor, this is framed as “de‑risking” rather than decoupling, but if you’re a Silicon Valley VC with a soft spot for Shenzhen startups, the difference is mostly semantic. Industry impact? Multinationals are accelerating the “China plus one” strategy. Chip and hardware supply chains keep drifting toward Southeast Asia and India, while Chinese firms double down on self‑reliance: more domestic fabs, in‑house AI models, and EV ecosystems that assume permanent Western hostility. Economists note that even as China’s trade data show strong exports in tech-heavy goods, the risk premium around anything sensitive—chips, cloud, big data—is climbing. Strategically, this phase of the tech war is about infrastructure dominance. Whoever controls AI compute, rare earths, and secure networks sets the rules. US experts warn that blacklists and bans could backfire by forcing China to build parallel systems that the rest of the world eventually adopts. Chinese strategists, in turn, argue that time is on Beijing’s side: once domestic chip and AI stacks mature, Washington loses leverage. My forecast? Over the next year, expect more targeted restrictions, more “quiet” cyber ops, and a world that increasingly has to pick sides between US‑centric and China‑centric tech ecosystems. Interoperability will be the real casualty. Thanks for tuning in, listeners, and don’t forget to subscribe for your next dose of Beijing Bytes. 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

Ayer4 min
episode Tech Cold War Heats Up: Chip Fights, Cable Spying, and Why Your GPU Suddenly Costs More artwork

Tech Cold War Heats Up: Chip Fights, Cable Spying, and Why Your GPU Suddenly Costs More

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Ting here, your friendly neighborhood China, cyber, and hacking nerd, and wow listeners, the last couple of weeks in the US‑China tech war have been spicy. Let’s start in cyberspace, because that’s where the sharpest elbows are. Microsoft and several US cybersecurity firms report a flurry of China‑linked intrusion campaigns quietly probing US critical infrastructure, from power grids to telecom backbones, with groups like Volt Typhoon still in the spotlight. At the same time, US officials have been warning that these aren’t smash‑and‑grab hacks; they’re pre‑positioning for potential disruption in a crisis, especially around Taiwan and undersea cables. Chinese state media, of course, flips the script and accuses Washington of “hegemonic cyber surveillance,” pointing back to the NSA playbook. On the hardware front, Washington just tightened the screws again. US Commerce Department officials have been quietly updating export controls to close loopholes around advanced AI chips, making it harder for Nvidia and others to ship “China‑only” downgraded GPUs that still pack serious AI punch. Analysts at the Center for Strategic and International Studies say this is about slowing China’s ability to train huge frontier models, not just about semiconductors as widgets. Beijing is not just sitting there mashing the angry emoji. Chinese regulators are doubling down on their own “unreliable entity” and export control lists, hinting they could further restrict exports of gallium, germanium, and advanced battery tech that US firms quietly rely on. At the same time, outlets like Economic Times report that China’s Moonshot AI, the company behind the Kimi chatbot, is chasing a valuation north of 20 to 30 billion dollars, showing Beijing’s bet that domestic champions can route around American choke points. Policy‑wise, we’re watching a slow but real decoupling. In Washington, think tanks and lawmakers are pushing outbound investment screening so US money can’t freely fuel sensitive Chinese AI, quantum, and biotech projects. In Beijing, new rules make it riskier for multinationals to share supply‑chain data or do detailed due diligence inside China, which India’s chief economic adviser recently flagged as a sign that global manufacturing may shift faster than expected. For industry, this is whiplash. US cloud providers are quietly re‑architecting who can access what compute from where. Chinese firms like Huawei and SMIC keep pushing “good enough” chips on older nodes, betting that clever design plus scale can partially offset losing 5‑nanometer and below. Meanwhile, China is aggressively recruiting US AI talent, something Asia‑focused analysts have been warning about as a long‑term brain‑drain risk for Silicon Valley. Strategically, here’s the uncomfortable forecast: neither side is winning cleanly. The US still dominates cutting‑edge chips and foundational models; China leads in deployment at massive scale, especially in surveillance, fintech, and industrial AI. The likely future is not a single tech stack but two partially incompatible ecosystems: a Washington‑aligned one built around secure supply chains, and a Beijing‑anchored one selling “no‑questions‑asked” infrastructure to the Global South. In other words, listeners, the US‑China tech war is less a “war” and more a long cold compile: constant patches, backdoors hunted, alliances forked, and everyone praying their dependencies don’t break at the worst possible time. Thanks 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

8 de jun de 20263 min
episode Chip Wars Heat Up: Why Beijing and Washington Are Playing Digital Keep-Away With Your Next iPhone Brain artwork

Chip Wars Heat Up: Why Beijing and Washington Are Playing Digital Keep-Away With Your Next iPhone Brain

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

7 de jun de 20263 min
episode Beijing Bytes: Death by a Thousand Bureaucratic Cuts in the Great Chip War artwork

Beijing Bytes: Death by a Thousand Bureaucratic Cuts in the Great Chip War

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Listeners, the Beijing Bytes tech war got louder over the past two weeks, and the signal is clear: the U.S. and China are now fighting across chips, cyber, standards, and supply chains all at once. The biggest story is not one blockbuster move, but a tightening web of pressure, retaliation, and positioning from Washington and Beijing. On the cybersecurity front, officials in the U.S. and allied media kept warning about Chinese-linked influence and intrusion activity, including efforts tied to narrative shaping and technical espionage. The Washington Times highlighted allegations involving a California tech executive and a broader Chinese disinformation campaign around Tiananmen, which fits the larger pattern of Beijing using information operations alongside conventional cyber tools. At the same time, the strategic backdrop remains intense: both sides treat cyber as a front line, not a side quest. On technology restrictions, the U.S. has continued to harden controls around advanced semiconductors, AI systems, and the equipment needed to make them. Recent reporting and policy commentary show Washington leaning harder on export restrictions, standards-setting, and supply-chain chokepoints to slow China’s access to frontier tech. Beijing, for its part, is not sitting still. Pekingnology notes that China increasingly frames the U.S.-China relationship as “competition” in technology, the economy, and global markets rather than direct conflict, which is classic Beijing language for, “we’re escalating, but with better posture.” Industry impact is already visible. U.S. chipmakers, AI firms, and multinational manufacturers are still navigating compliance headaches, sales uncertainty, and the risk that a single rule change can redraw billions in revenue. On the China side, domestic firms keep pushing for substitution, indigenization, and resilience, especially in semiconductors, cloud infrastructure, and industrial software. That means more state support, more homegrown procurement, and more pressure on foreign suppliers to prove they are politically reliable. In the words of many analysts, decoupling may be too neat a word; “selective techno-splitting” is closer to the messy reality. Strategically, both governments are aiming at the same prize: control over the layers of technology that shape military power, economic growth, and digital governance. The U.S. wants to preserve its lead in advanced computing and prevent sensitive tools from reaching China’s security apparatus. China wants to reduce vulnerability, expand its own tech stack, and keep access to global markets and standards bodies where influence is often quieter than sanctions but just as powerful. My forecast? Expect more export controls, more cyber attribution, more pressure on chip toolmakers, and more fighting over rules, not just products. The next phase will be less about one dramatic ban and more about a thousand bureaucratic cuts. That’s the beauty of modern tech rivalry, listeners: the battle is global, but the paperwork is brutal. Thank you 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

5 de jun de 20263 min
episode Silicon Smugglers and the Great Chip Chase: How China's Military is Latency-Hopping Around US Export Controls artwork

Silicon Smugglers and the Great Chip Chase: How China's Military is Latency-Hopping Around US Export Controls

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with your fresh batch of Beijing Bytes, where the firewalls are high and the stakes are higher. Let’s start with the silicon smuggling saga. The New York Times and Tom’s Hardware report that despite Washington’s export controls, research by Wirescreen shows Chinese military-linked institutions have still been acquiring Nvidia A100, A800, H100, and H800 chips through third-party resellers and shell companies. That means the People’s Liberation Army is effectively latency-hopping around U.S. rules, keeping its AI programs training while the Commerce Department plays whack‑a‑mole with procurement trails. Zoom out to the broader front: according to analysis covered in Organiser and by European policy watchers, the U.S. and the European Union are tightening a coordinated tech line on China, from high-end AI chips to electric vehicles. The emerging playbook is simple: treat advanced semiconductors, cloud, and AI models as strategic assets, not just cool gadgets. That’s bad news if you’re a Chinese EV or AI startup hoping to plug directly into Western capital and compute. On the policy side, Sinocism’s recent “Strategic Stability, Structural Strain” roundup highlights Chinese scholars like Huang Ping and Jia Min debating how long Beijing has before U.S. AI advantages become structurally locked in. Their argument in plain Ting-speak: America’s chip, cloud, and model ecosystem is compounding like interest; every year of restricted access widens the gap, pushing China toward self-reliance, gray‑zone acquisition, or both. In Washington, the export-control crowd is doubling down on the idea of a “small yard, high fence” around AI, quantum, and advanced fabs, but the yard keeps getting bigger. At the same time, RealClearWorld notes that Donald Trump is signaling a slightly cooler stance on Taiwan escalation while still framing its semiconductor fabs as vital U.S. interests. Translation: tech deterrence first, kinetic war… ideally never, because no one wants to reboot the global chip supply chain from scratch. Cyber-wise, security analysts I track are warning that as hardware doors close, expect more software‑side aggression: supply‑chain compromises, cloud tenant hopping, and more campaigns targeting U.S. and allied AI infrastructure. For China, cyber operations become the fastest lane to the capabilities blocked on the commercial market. For the U.S., that means hardening everything from model-training clusters to university research labs that sit one VPN hop away from crown‑jewel data. Looking forward, most experts forecast a bifurcated stack: one U.S‑led ecosystem, one China‑centric one, with everyone else forced to choose, mix, or route around. The real race isn’t just chips; it’s who sets the standards, controls the developer tools, and writes the security assumptions that everyone quietly inherits. I’m Ting, thanks for tuning in to Beijing Bytes. Don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next exploit in this geopolitical patch cycle. 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

3 de jun de 20263 min