Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates
This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your slightly overcaffeinated guide to the US‑China tech war, so let’s jack straight into the matrix of the past couple weeks. First, the big strategic vibe shift: analysts at CSIS and former Google CEO Eric Schmidt have been warning that the real battleground is long‑horizon basic research and advanced chips, not just flashy apps. According to CSIS commentary, America still holds advantages in open collaboration and top‑tier universities, but Washington has “dropped the ball” on sustained basic research funding while Beijing pours state money into AI and quantum. That sets the stage for everything else. On the restriction front, US export controls just tightened again on advanced semiconductors and AI hardware going to China, especially anything that can train large‑scale models or run battlefield autonomy. Chinese officials, quoted by outlets like WION, have lodged stern protests against these updated semiconductor controls and new sanctions on Chinese firms, calling them malicious attempts to contain China’s rise. At the same time, Chinese regulators have stepped up scrutiny of exports of critical materials like indium, where China produces nearly 70 percent of global supply, and companies making diamond wafers for AI chips are reporting surging orders and expansion plans. That’s Beijing quietly reminding Washington: “You choke chips, we squeeze materials.” Cyber is humming in the background like a bad fan in a data center. Western security firms and US officials continue to flag Chinese‑linked intrusion sets targeting cloud providers, telecom backbones, and defense contractors, while Chinese state media amplifies claims that the NSA and US Cyber Command are running large‑scale cyber espionage against Chinese universities and research labs. Both capitals talk “defensive security,” but both sides are clearly probing each other’s digital soft spots, from undersea cables to satellite links. Policy‑wise, you can see decoupling harden into doctrine. Chinese planners just rolled out a trillion‑yuan tech fund to back startups in AI, robotics, and advanced manufacturing, described by Deutsche Welle as part of a broader push for self‑reliance in core technologies. In Washington, the line now is “small yard, high fence” around chips, AI, quantum, and biotech—but that yard keeps getting bigger with each new rule. Industry impact? Multinationals are re‑architecting supply chains like crazy. Chip designers in California are redesigning GPUs specifically to stay under US export thresholds, while Chinese cloud giants scramble for any permissible accelerators and alternative architectures. According to commentary on the ground in Shanghai, the era of deep US‑China tech integration is effectively over; companies are now planning for two parallel ecosystems, from operating systems to cloud stacks to payment rails. Strategically, this is drifting toward a full tech bifurcation. US allies in Europe and Asia are being pushed to choose sides on 5G, cloud, and AI governance. Beijing is betting it can build a China‑centric sphere tied together by Belt and Road digital infrastructure and its own standards. Washington is betting that talent, alliances, and openness will outrun subsidies and industrial policy in the long game. My forecast? Over the next year, expect: tighter AI‑related export controls; more Chinese leverage using critical minerals; more covert cyber operations hitting industrial and cloud targets; and a race to lock in global standards for chips, AI safety, and data flows. The risk isn’t one big cyber–Pearl Harbor; it’s a thousand quiet hacks that slowly rewrite the balance of power. Thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you never miss your 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
262 afleveringen
Reacties
0Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst
Meld je nu aan en word lid van de Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates community!