Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates

Inception Point Ai

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates offers timely and insightful coverage of the latest developments in the US-China technology competition. This regularly updated podcast explores the critical areas of cybersecurity incidents, new tech restrictions, and policy changes, shedding light on the industry impacts and strategic implications for both nations. Featuring expert analysis and future forecasts, Beijing Bytes provides listeners with a clear understanding of the ongoing tech rivalry and its global significance, making it essential listening for anyone interested in the intersection of technology and international relations. For more info go to https://www.quietplease.ai Check out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Xi's Robot Army vs Trump's Tariff Threats: When AI Drones and Iran Drama Collide in the Ultimate Tech Showdown

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, your pulse on the US-China tech war. Over the past two weeks, tensions have spiked as Beijing rolled out its 15th Five-Year Plan on Thursday, a 141-page blueprint to dominate AI and turbocharge breakthroughs in semiconductors, drones, and robotics. President Xi Jinping framed it as core to national security, betting on "new productive forces" to dodge the middle-income trap and US export controls, with AI mentioned over 50 times. HSBC's Fred Neumann calls it a high-stakes rebalancing, enrolling state-owned enterprises to buy made-in-China chips and envisioning robot-filled factories amid a lowered 4.5-5% growth target for 2026. This comes as the US races to catch up in AI weapons. At a Beijing military parade last September, Xi hosted Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong-un, showcasing autonomous drones flying with fighter jets—tech Pentagon officials say outpaces America's unmanned combat programs. In response, California's Anduril started early production of self-flying AI drones at its Columbus, Ohio factory last month, while Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth ordered all branches to "accelerate like hell" on AI, with over $13 billion budgeted for autonomous systems. Cybersecurity shadows loom large with Iran drama fueling the fire. On April 12, President Donald Trump warned on Fox News' Sunday Morning Futures with Maria Bartiromo that China faces immediate 50% tariffs on all US exports if caught arming Iran during the ceasefire—specifically MANPADS shoulder-fired missiles, per CNN intel from April 11. This echoes his April 8 Truth Social post after Islamabad talks collapsed on April 11-12, where US-Iran nuclear talks stalled despite progress elsewhere. Trump announced a US Navy blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, accusing Tehran of "world extortion," sharpening China's clean-tech edge as energy chaos boosts its batteries, solar, and EVs—already 85% of global charging stations, aiming to double in three years. Industry feels the heat: US firms grapple with controls, while China's DeepSeek closes gaps on OpenAI and Gemini, sparking a "token economy" of open-source AI agents despite curbs. Strategically, it signals Xi doubling down on state-led growth per East Asia Forum, insulating against tariffs that could spike consumer prices and oil volatility. Experts forecast escalation—Trump's Beijing summit with Xi next month as leverage, but with Supreme Court limits on IEEPA, Section 301 probes loom. China gains self-sufficiency; the US pushes alliances like NATO rearming. Watch for Hormuz shifts and AI arms breakthroughs reshaping global power. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. 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

    4 min
  2. 2 DAYS AGO

    Quantum Qubits and Shoulder-Fired Threats: When China's Tech War Gets Spicy with a Side of Iranian Drama

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, your pulse on the US-China tech war. Over the past two weeks, tensions have spiked like a quantum qubit flipping states, blending cyber shadows, export clamps, and geopolitical chess moves that could redefine global supply chains. It kicked off with President Donald Trump's stark Sunday warning to Beijing over reports of China prepping advanced air defense systems for Iran—think MANPADs, those shoulder-fired missiles that could shred low-flying US jets. CNN's intel sources say shipments might route through third countries to dodge scrutiny, but China's Washington embassy spokesperson flat-out denied it, calling US claims baseless sensationalism. This isn't just arms talk; it's tech bleeding into proxy battles, with The Economic Times reporting the stakes could spark "big problems" if Beijing proceeds. Meanwhile, Iran's Strait of Hormuz standoffs—warning US destroyers they'd blow up in 30 minutes—have diverted American military focus from Asia, per Economic Times analysis, right as Trump eyes a summit with Xi Jinping. On the policy front, the US Federal Communications Commission is eyeing brutal new restrictions on Chinese telecom giants like China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom—potentially booting them from US data centers and blocking connections to their protocols, as Shanghai Daily's City News Service buzzed over the weekend. This builds on Trump's 2025 tariff escalations, which Jacobin traces back to the 2018 ASML blockade denying China extreme ultraviolet lithography machines for cutting-edge chips. Beijing hit back with Announcement 61, choking rare earth exports vital for US defense—those minerals from Baotou mines fueling everything from F-35s to AI. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called it a "bazooka" at free-world supply chains; tariffs trimmed, but the weapon's still loaded. Industry feels the quake: China's quantum sector exploded with Q1 2026 funding topping all of 2025, per 36Kr and Economic Reference News—over seven rounds above RMB 100 million, shifting to early-stage bets as qubit counts climb and error rates plummet toward McKinsey's 2027-2032 commercialization. In Shenzhen, ex-ASML engineers poached with $700K bonuses are prototyping their own EUV machines, Jacobin reports, aiming to boot the US from supply chains by 2030. Strategically, US intel in the Director of National Intelligence’s Annual Threat Assessment says no fixed China-Taiwan invasion timeline—Beijing knows an amphibious assault risks epic failure—yet nuclear modernization races on amid fears of America's Golden Dome missile shield. The Iran mess pulls US assets from the Pacific, weakening the Asia pivot. Experts forecast a bifurcated tech world: Washington doubles down on blacklists, Beijing self-relies via quantum leaps and rare earth leverage. Ping-pong diplomacy 2.0? CGTN sees tech bonds emerging, but proxy wars like Iran suggest escalation. For both nations, it's existential—US supremacy vs. China's breakout. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more Beijing Bytes. 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

    5 min
  3. 4 DAYS AGO

    Cyber Heists, Banned Labs, and Chinas Pacific Power Grab: The Tech War Gets Messy

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, your pulse on the US-China tech war. Over the past two weeks, tensions have spiked like a rogue algorithm gone haywire. Let's dive in. First, a massive cybersecurity bombshell: a hacker claims to have swiped over 10 petabytes of data from China's National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, including sensitive defense files. Democratic Underground reports the breach exposed vulnerabilities in Beijing's crown jewel of computing power, sending ripples through their military-industrial complex. No official confirmation yet, but experts like those at Breaking Defense warn this could be just the tip of the iceberg in shadow cyber duels. On the US side, the Federal Communications Commission is doubling down. Reuters details how the FCC will vote April 30 to ban all Chinese labs—think those testing smartphones, cameras, and laptops—from certifying US-bound electronics. That's after barring 23 government-linked labs last year, with 75% of US gear still funneled through China-based facilities. They're also eyeing blocks on China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom's data centers and network interconnections, per Global Times analysis. Hikvision's pushing back hard, calling it a retroactive gut punch to prior approvals. Add bans on new Chinese drones and routers, and it's clear: Washington's "covered list" of threats like Huawei and ZTE is expanding fast. Beijing's not sitting idle. On April 7, Premier Li Qiang's State Council dropped the Regulation on Industrial and Supply Chain Security—China's first comprehensive shield against foreign curbs. Ministry of Justice docs outline 18 articles empowering reviews of discriminatory US moves, with retaliatory tools like trade bans and market access blocks. Geopolitechs notes this formalizes "military-civil fusion," tying civilian tech to war readiness. Meanwhile, in the South Pacific, Heritage Foundation's Brent Sadler highlights China's dual-use push: $3.55 billion in ports and airstrips, like Vanuatu's Luganville Wharf, now docking Type 055 destroyers. A 2025 Sinopsis report flags 40 such sites, potentially flipping Indo-Pacific logistics in a crisis. Industry feels the heat—US chip sales to China held strong in 2025 despite Trump-era restrictions, says Light Reading, though Huawei's no Nvidia AI contender yet. Strategic fallout? Analysts forecast deeper decoupling: US force posture at risk without Pacific fusion centers and wargaming, per Heritage. Beijing eyes supply chain sovereignty, possibly de-dollarizing energy via Strait of Hormuz proxies, as Audacy podcasts speculate. Looking ahead, expect FCC votes to ignite tit-for-tat escalations by summer. US planners must layer maritime intel and COFA funding to counter dual-use traps, while China fortifies. The tech frontlines are redrawing global power maps—stay vigilant. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more bytes. 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

    4 min
  4. 6 DAYS AGO

    Missiles Exposed and Backdoor Deals: How Trump Called China's Bluff in Iran While Xi Scrambles

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, diving straight into the hottest updates on the US-China tech war from the past two weeks. Tensions are spiking as American air strikes obliterated Chinese reverse-engineered missiles like the HQ-9B, HQ-16, CM-302, and YJ-21E in Iran, exposing Beijing's aggressive tech copying from Western designs, according to Global Defense Corp reports on April 8. Despite the humiliating losses in places like Iran, Pakistan, and Venezuela, China vows no retreat from reverse-engineering foreign tech, fueling accusations of intellectual property theft that's core to this rivalry. Cybersecurity incidents lit up when those strikes hit, but the real drama unfolded at the UN Security Council. Russia and China vetoed a watered-down resolution to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with China's ambassador Fu Cong slamming it as a US power grab that ignored root causes, per Associated Press coverage. This bold move blocked American and Israeli aims, but it backfired fast—US President Donald Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran, calling it a "total and complete victory" on Truth Social, crediting chats with Pakistan's Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir for pressuring Tehran. Trump even shouted out China for nudging Iran to the table, though Economic Times sources hint Pakistan stole the spotlight in backchannel diplomacy. On the policy front, one year post-Liberation Day tariffs, Tech Insider tallies 89,000 US tech jobs lost and 25% semiconductor tariffs biting hard, with a landmark Supreme Court ruling upholding them. China's pushing back—Xi Jinping urged reforms and a tech surge in the services sector to drive consumption-led growth, as Stratnews Global notes. Industry impacts? Adviser-Hub highlights investor jitters from US supply chain cuts and China's Chips Act rules, yet sparking self-sufficiency booms for domestic chip designers. Strategically, this escalates the proxy battles: US strikes signal zero tolerance for China's tech exports to adversaries like Iran, crippling Beijing's missile ambitions and global arms sales. Experts at Bloomberg Television forecast markets rallying on the ceasefire, but warn of prolonged decoupling—China leading ASEAN sentiment surveys ahead of the US, per Thaiger analysis. Future outlook? Expect tighter US export controls on AI and semis, while Beijing doubles down on homegrown innovation, risking economic silos but hardening national security. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe now for more Beijing Bytes edge. 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

    4 min
  5. 6 APR

    Smuggled Chips and Spy Cams: How Beijing Dodges Trumps Tech Crackdown While Hikvision Staff Get Purged

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, diving straight into the US-China tech war fireworks from the past two weeks. Picture this: I'm huddled over my Beijing apartment desk at 4 AM, screens glowing with alerts from Washington to Shenzhen, as Trump's team ramps up the pressure cooker. Just last Friday, the Federal Communications Commission proposed a total import ban on gear from Chinese giants like Huawei, ZTE, Hytera, Hikvision, and Dahua—stuff already on their Covered List since 2021. This builds on 2022's new model blocks and recent hits on Chinese drones and consumer routers. FCC chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel argues it's essential to shield US comms from national security risks, letting folks keep what they've bought but slamming the door on fresh imports to dodge a last-minute rush. Meanwhile, AI chip smuggling scandals exploded. On March 19, Yih-Shyan Liaw, co-founder of Super Micro Computer, got nabbed with two colleagues for rerouting Nvidia GPU servers to China via Taiwan and Malaysia shell games—faking docs and dummy audits from 2024 to 2025. Days later, March 22 to 25, FBI busted a Hong Kong citizen and two Americans for ordering 750 servers worth $170 million, lying about non-China destinations. Congress fired back March 26 with the Chip Security Act, embedding GPS trackers in advanced chips for real-time location checks by Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo. Analyst Carlotta Kozlowskyj at BISI calls it a supply chain game-changer, exposing how Beijing's AI hunger keeps evading export controls since 2022. Trade salvos flew too: Trump's April "Liberation Day" tariffs layered 100% duties on Chinese goods, hitting shipping and software exports, after March's Section 301 probes into unfair practices. China hit back with reciprocal probes, rare earth curbs, and its 2026 Service Import Catalogue—easing some EV battery caps but tightening AI and biotech via joint ventures, all under MOFCOM's defensive anti-sanctions shield. Industry feels the burn: Agilian Technology in China saw half its US orders freeze amid tariff chaos, yet doubled down on unbeatable manufacturing edge, per Japan Times reports. Cybersecurity shadows loom—China purged 300 Hikvision staff linked to Iranian leader Ali Khamenei's ops, hinting US-Israel intel exploits in those cameras. Beijing's cyberspace regulator dropped draft rules on "digital humans," curbing AI fraud and deepfakes, as expert Du Cuilan warns of rumor-spreading risks. Strategically, US aims to starve China's tech ascent, but smuggling shows limits—demand's too fierce. Experts forecast escalation: if Chip Act passes, global AI chains fracture; China pushes autonomy via 15th Five-Year Plan. A May Trump-Xi summit in Busan could truce tariffs for fentanyl curbs, but volatility reigns. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more Beijing Bytes edge. 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

    4 min
  6. 5 APR

    Chip Wars Heat Up: How Congress Just Kneecapped China's Semiconductor Dreams While Spies Sell Satellite Pics

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, your pulse on the US-China tech war. Over the past two weeks, as tensions spike amid the Iran conflict, Washington has ramped up its chip blockade like never before. The bipartisan MATCH Act, pushed by Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party chair John Moolenaar and cosponsor Michael Baumgartner, targets China's semiconductor dreams head-on. This bill bans sales and servicing of critical lithography gear from Dutch giant ASML and others to top Chinese firms like SMIC, Huawei, YMTC, Hua Hong, and CXMT. According to the SCCCP release, it closes loopholes letting China snag immersion DUV tools—stuff they can't make yet—forcing allies like the Netherlands to align within 150 days or face US unilateral action. Baumgartner warns China craves dominance in tech fueling national security, echoing how they subsidized solar and EV wins. Industry hits hard: ASML's older DUV lines to Chinese ops? Done. Huawei's AI chip push? Slowed. The Economic Times reports US rules now choke advanced semis and equipment via third parties, safeguarding supply chains as Chinese chips sneak into US infrastructure. Cyber front's wild—Washington Post reveals Chinese firms like those tapping Jilin satellite data are selling AI-tracked intel on US military moves in the Middle East. Analyst Ryan Fedasiuk from American Enterprise Institute says they're blending open-source imagery to pinpoint units, raising alarms for Pentagon brass amid Iran strikes near Bushehr nuclear plant, where Russia evacuated 198 workers post-US-Israeli hit. Policy shifts? China's Cyberspace Administration drafted rules for digital virtual humans, stressing data protection and no-harm content, per Techieray substack—self-regulation push amid US scrutiny. Hoover Institution notes US Ambassador to Canada blocking Chinese EVs routed north, while a judge lets them keep Mao's secretary diaries from PRC claws. Strategically, this escalates: US holds AI lead, but China's AI military tracking and ultra-large underwater drones—lead scientist Yan Shuai clarifies in Chinese Journal of Ship Research they're for Taiwan Strait defense, not LA strikes—signal asymmetric plays. Expert Eswar Prasad flags geopolitics derailing WTO talks, Sino-Russia tech ties deepening. Forecast? MATCH Act passage could starve China's 7nm fabs by summer, per Reuters, but Beijing's subsidies might spark black-market booms. US risks ally pushback; China, innovation isolation. Tech war's gone kinetic—watch Gulf ripples. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more. 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

    4 min
  7. 3 APR

    Chips, Tariffs and Solar Spies: Why Beijing is Winning the Tech War While Trump Plans Liberation Day

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Alexandra Reeves here with Beijing Bytes, your pulse on the US-China tech war. Over the past two weeks, tensions have spiked like a rogue AI algorithm gone haywire, from chip curbs to green tech clashes amid the Hormuz oil chaos. Let's kick off with the hottest front: semiconductors. US lawmakers in the House dropped a bombshell bill targeting exports of chipmaking tools to China, zeroing in on Dutch giant ASML Holding and Japan's Tokyo Electron. Bipartisan fury aims to choke Beijing's AI ambitions, with a Senate version looming this month, per Bloomberg reports. Senators also unveiled the MATCH Act to slam the brakes on AI chip tools heading east, as Hindustan Times details, forcing China to hustle domestic alternatives. Meanwhile, tariffs are escalating into trade war 2.0. Washington slapped 145% duties on Chinese goods, countered by Beijing's 125% on US exports, says South China Morning Post. Trump dubbed April 2nd "Liberation Day" from his Rose Garden podium, unveiling reciprocal tariffs on over 60 partners that tanked bilateral trade, according to Politico. China fired back with sweeping probes into US cleantech barriers and policies blocking their green exports, wrapping in six months via Ministry of Commerce statements covered by JD Supra and Eurasia Review. Green tech's a battlefield too. The UK nixed Chinese wind titan Ming Yang's £1.5 billion Scottish factory over national security, with Energy Minister Michael Shanks vowing resilient supply chains, Financial Times reports. US Commerce restrictions linger on smart-car tech from firms like BYD and Geely to thwart surveillance, blocking their $10,000 EVs despite global buzz, LA Times notes. China's solar shipments to Cuba exploded from $5 million to $117 million by 2025, Washington Post adds, dodging US oil blockades. Industry feels the heat—Huawei's NearLink wireless tech, born from 2019 US blacklists, now rivals Bluetooth with lower power and wider range, pushing Xi Jinping's Made in China 2025 for self-reliance in AI and robotics, Politico analyzes. No major cybersecurity breaches hit headlines, but the shadow war rages. Strategically, experts see China gaining: Bloomberg notes Beijing's "unwavering" low-carbon push via Vice-Minister Li Gao at China Development Forum, plus Xinhua's energy-saving plan for hydrogen electrolysers. Hormuz blockade—blamed by spokesperson Mao Ning on US-Israel strikes—spikes Brent crude to $100, pinching China's oil imports while Trump urges seizures. UN envoy Fu Cong warns force legitimizes chaos. Forecast? A May Trump-Xi summit might ease EV tariffs, but analysts like those at Carbon Brief predict deeper decoupling. China accelerates independence; US doubles down on alliances. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more bytes. 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

    4 min
  8. 1 APR

    Baijiu and Billions: How Three Smugglers Almost Snuck 170M in AI Chips to China While Trump Eyes Xi Summit

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with Beijing Bytes, your witty whip through the US-China tech war chaos from the last two weeks. Picture this: I'm sipping baijiu in my Beijing high-rise, screens flickering with export busts and AI arms races, while the world's on fire from that Iran mess spilling into our silicon skirmishes. Kickoff with the cybersecurity sting—US feds just nailed Stanley Yi Zheng, a Chinese national, alongside American duo Matthew Kelly from Hopewell Junction, New York, and Tommy Shad English from Atlanta, Georgia. According to DOJ criminal complaints unsealed March 20, 2026, these three schemed to smuggle $170 million in NVIDIA-level AI chips from a California hardware giant, routing through Thailand shell companies to dodge export controls. English even signed fake certifications swearing no China destination, but texts exposed their gig: fake corps, chip values skyrocketing in Shenzhen black markets, and recruitment plots. FBI's Roman Rozhavsky called it a direct hit on America's tech edge—Assistant AG John A. Eisenberg echoed, these are "years of strategic investment" they're swiping. Witty aside: smuggling servers like it's 2023 all over again, but with Trump 2.0 heat cranked up. Tech restrictions? US Treasury's new Venezuela general licenses explicitly blacklist China, Russia, DPRK, Cuba, and Iran from mineral ops—Mao Ning from China's Foreign Ministry slammed it April 1 as manipulative, demanding sanction lifts. Meanwhile, State Department's Jacob Helberg fielded questions on ASML export curbs to China, hinting no easing soon. China fires back, per CGTN, boosting homegrown AI chips as Nvidia sales tank—Shanghai's AI Finance Summit in March had Tongdun's Dong Jiwei and Guan’an's Hu Shaoyong preaching "active intelligent prevention" with AI honeypots against ransomware, ditching static rules for behavioral traps. Policy shifts: Cyberspace Administration of China dropped draft rules April 1 on "human-like interactive AI," mandating safeguards for chatbots mimicking emotions—think content moderation, data masking, and human takeover to curb overuse or fraud. US side, Palantir CTO Shyam Sankar warned Fox News we'd burn through weapons stocks in eight days against China, pushing asymmetric re-industrialization over matching Beijing's factory frenzy. Industry hits hard—China's AI spreading globally raises US security red flags, per War on the Rocks, while renewables see US incentives blocking Chinese tech dominance. Strategic play? Brookings notes Iran war delayed Trump-Xi summit to May 14-15; Trump eyes quick Iran exit per NewsBytes, but Palantir says regulate less, produce faster or lose deterrence. Forecast: Expect tighter US chip clamps, China's self-reliance sprint yielding Huawei 2.0 breakthroughs by Q3, and cyber tit-for-tat escalating—maybe NSA's Año countering Beijing's Fujian claims next. Listeners, stay sharp; this war's binary, and we're all in the code. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe now for more bytes! 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

    4 min

About

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates offers timely and insightful coverage of the latest developments in the US-China technology competition. This regularly updated podcast explores the critical areas of cybersecurity incidents, new tech restrictions, and policy changes, shedding light on the industry impacts and strategic implications for both nations. Featuring expert analysis and future forecasts, Beijing Bytes provides listeners with a clear understanding of the ongoing tech rivalry and its global significance, making it essential listening for anyone interested in the intersection of technology and international relations. For more info go to https://www.quietplease.ai Check out these deals https://amzn.to/48MZPjs