Tech Shield: US vs China Updates
This is your Tech Shield: US vs China Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with your Tech Shield update on the US-China cyber frontline. Over the past week, tensions spiked as China drew a hard line against US tech grabs, slamming the door on Meta's $2 billion acquisition of Singapore-based AI startup Manus. According to China's National Development and Reform Commission, they prohibited the deal outright on April 27, citing national security under their foreign investment review—Manus, with its Chinese roots, builds agentic AI that autonomously codes apps, crunches market data, and handles budgets. The Wall Street Journal reports this spooks investors, signaling Beijing's long arm to keep AI talent and tech from flowing west, even for offshore firms. Meta insists the transaction complied with laws and expects resolution, but Manus's site still lists it as "now part of Meta." This Meta-Manus block isn't isolated; it's part of China's first-ever veto on a foreign AI takeover, per BigGo Finance, escalating the rivalry amid US export curbs on chips. Meanwhile, a US court in San Francisco heard Cisco's bid to dismiss accusations from Falun Gong practitioners that it built a censorship network for China to track them—UCA News covered the April 29 hearing, highlighting ongoing scrutiny of US firms aiding Beijing's surveillance. Shifting to defenses, Pentagon generals Marc Berkowitz and others warned Capitol Hill this week of a glaring gap: America has no shield against China's hypersonic missiles, which maneuver to dodge sensors. Times of India and Mirror Now detail how low interceptor stocks from regional fights compound the crisis, prompting President Trump's push for the $185 billion Golden Dome—a space-ground missile defense net targeting China and Russia threats. On cyber scams, ThinkChina's Stephen Olson notes US-China rivalry hampers Southeast Asia fights; China's Lancang-Mekong center busted 57,000 fraudsters, but focuses on Chinese victims via Huawei surveillance in Bangkok and Laos. US pushes AI detection and open systems, fearing data grabs for espionage. Expert take: These moves patch some holes—China's blocks protect IP, Golden Dome eyes hypersonics—but gaps loom. Olson flags fragmented anti-scam efforts letting criminals thrive; Pentagon admits defenses lag, and without joint intel, threats like Volt Typhoon persist. Effectiveness? Reactive wins, but proactive tech like AI sentinels and quantum-secure nets are essential to close gaps before escalation. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more Tech Shield intel. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai. For more http://www.quietplease.ai Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI.
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