Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates
This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with your latest dose of Beijing Bytes, where the US‑China tech war is less “trade spat” and more “patch Tuesday, forever.” Let’s jack straight into the last two weeks. First big move: Washington just expanded its list of Chinese companies tagged as having ties to the People’s Liberation Army, adding heavyweights like Alibaba, Baidu, and BYD, along with a major chipmaker, according to the Economic Times and other business outlets. The Pentagon list doesn’t ban them outright, but it scares off investors, blocks defense contracts, and paints a big “dual‑use risk” label on some of China’s most important tech champions. Beijing’s Commerce Ministry blasted the move as “unjustified suppression” of Chinese enterprises and a violation of understandings reached at the last Trump–Xi summit, accusing Washington of “abusing national security” language to kneecap Chinese innovation. Cyber front next, because that’s where things get spicy. OpenAI recently published a report describing China‑based influence operations using ChatGPT from late 2025 into this year to generate English‑language posts and memes aimed at US audiences. According to that report, one campaign, nicknamed “Data Center Bandwagon,” pushed the narrative that American AI data centers were secretly jacking up electricity bills for US households, complete with comics and social posts crafted to look grassroots and very “Midwestern uncle on Facebook.” Another cluster attacked US tariffs and tech controls, carefully steering around any mention of Xi Jinping. OpenAI says the campaigns largely flopped in engagement terms, but they show how both AI and psychology are now battlefield tools in the tech war. Those two stories connect to the broader policy shift: in Washington, there’s growing momentum to treat advanced AI, chips, and cloud as strategic infrastructure on par with telecom backbones. That means more outbound investment screening, more export controls on AI accelerators and EDA tools, and likely new rules on Americans working for sensitive Chinese labs. On the Chinese side, policymakers are doubling down on “self‑reliance in core technologies,” pushing domestic chip fabs, operating systems, and large language models to reduce exposure to US chokepoints. Industry impact? If you’re Alibaba or Baidu, being labeled a “military company” raises compliance costs globally and makes partnerships with US or EU firms way harder. For US cloud and chip companies, the short‑term win is locking Chinese rivals out of certain markets; the long‑term risk is accelerating a fully separate Chinese tech stack that no one in Silicon Valley gets to sell into. Strategically, both capitals are betting that whoever controls compute, data, and networks controls the future balance of power. US strategists see restricting Chinese access as buying time; Chinese strategists see it as proof that only a sovereign, end‑to‑end supply chain is safe. My forecast: more narrow, targeted restrictions are coming on AI training compute, semiconductor tools, and maybe even certain cross‑border data flows. Cyber ops will lean harder on AI‑generated content but stay deniable and deniable‑ish. Expect two partially decoupled ecosystems, with countries from Southeast Asia to the EU pressured to choose sides, at least on critical infrastructure. That’s it for this burst of Beijing Bytes. I’m Ting, thanks for tuning in, and don’t forget to subscribe so you don’t miss the next zero‑day in geopolitics. 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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