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

    Chips, Spies and Baijiu Lies: How China's Cyber Army Just Went Full Throttle on Uncle Sam

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your go-to gal for all things China cyber chaos and tech tussles. Buckle up, because the US-China tech war just hit warp speed over the last two weeks—think chips flying, hackers lurking, and Xi Jinping flexing like it's 2026's hottest drama. Picture this: I'm sipping baijiu in my Beijing byte bunker when bam—leaked docs from Recorded Future drop, exposing China's "Expedition Cloud" platform. They're rehearsing cyberattacks on neighbors' critical infrastructure, like power grids in the South China Sea and Indochina. Straight-up digital dress rehearsals for real-world pain, proving Beijing's cyber playbook is sharper than a Huawei edge router. Over in DC, lawmakers are on fire. House Select Committee on China Chairman John Moolenaar and Foreign Affairs Chair Brian Mast fired off a bipartisan letter to Secretary Marco Rubio and Howard Lutnick, slamming "critical gaps" in export controls. They're pushing countrywide bans on chipmaking tools from Dutch firms like ASML—sales doubled to China in 2024, folks! No more entity-specific loopholes; every tool slipping in is a "permanent loss of American leverage." Meanwhile, Senator Elizabeth Warren teamed with Jim Banks for the AI Overwatch Act, slapping a two-year Nvidia Blackwell chip ban to China, overriding Trump's limited H200 sales nod. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei lobbied hard on the Hill, warning these chips fuel AI weapons. Cyber front's brutal too. FBI's Operation Winter Shield names Chinese firms like Integrity Technology Group aiding hackers—Flack's Typhoon and Assault Typhoon breached US networks via these "blended threats." Google's Threat Intelligence Group flags China-nexus crews like UNC3886 and UNC5221 hammering the defense industrial base, sneaking in via edge devices. Cisco Talos outs DKnife, a stealthy Chinese-linked implant hijacking Linux traffic for credential theft. And Trump's NSA pick? Warns China's aggressively chasing AI chips for "AI-enhanced weapons." China's clapping back slick. Shanghai pumped its chip fund 11-fold for self-reliance, Xi toured Beijing labs signaling 5-year plan tech dominance. Moonshot AI's Kimi K2.5 narrowed the model gap, per Brookings' Kyle Chan—US chip curbs? Meh. ByteDance, Alibaba, Tencent got 400,000 H200 approvals, balancing imports with homegrown grit. Moore Threads dives into AI coding beyond silicon. Industry's reeling: Nvidia's Jensen Huang expands Taiwan HQ via TSMC, but whispers say Blackwell chips sneak to China via Singapore. US outbound rules chill Asia investments; Panama voids CK Hutchison deals, eyeing Chinese assets. Strategically? US holds the moat but it's cracking—China's whole-of-society push means espionage via companies and crooks. Experts like Semafor say Beijing's AI weapons race accelerates; forecasts predict tighter allied controls or solo US strikes. For nations? America risks over-reliance on TSMC; China bets on quantity over quality, but job-killing AI forces Beijing to tweak policies. Whew, listeners, that's Beijing Bytes—stay vigilant in this silicon skirmish. Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more tech war tea! 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. 3 DAYS AGO

    Chip Wars Gone Wild: Trump Flip-Flops While China Hacks Telecoms and Hoards Silver

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your go-to gal for all things China cyber chaos and tech tango. Buckle up, because the US-China tech war just hit warp speed these past two weeks—think chip ping-pong, sneaky hacks, and enough policy flips to make your head spin. First off, cybersecurity's popping like fireworks at Lunar New Year. Singapore's Cyber Security Agency dropped a bombshell: China-linked UNC3886 APT crew hammered all four major telcos—M1, Singtel, StarHub, and SIMBA Telecom—with zero-day exploits, rootkits, and VMware sneak attacks. They siphoned tech data but no customer info got nabbed, thanks to Operation Cyber Guardian shutting 'em down. Over in the US, the FBI's Operation Winter Shield spotlighted PRC's Volt Typhoon and Flax Typhoon campaigns targeting end-of-life devices in critical infrastructure like healthcare—path of least resistance, folks, no fancy zero-days needed. Leaked docs even show Beijing rehearsing cyber drills on neighbors' power grids and telecoms. And don't sleep on Ding Linwei's conviction for swiping Google AI blueprints to boost Chinese rivals over Amazon and Microsoft. Now, tech restrictions? Trump's team pulled a 180 on January 13th, ditching the blanket ban for case-by-case H200 chip exports to China—Nvidia's getting approvals for ByteDance, Alibaba, Tencent, over 400,000 units with 25% tariffs and caps. But China's clapping back, blocking H200 imports unless desperate, pushing self-reliance while Guangdong pumps record chip gear exports. Moore Threads is ditching silicon dreams for AI coding tools, Iluvatar's gunning to beat Nvidia's Rubin GPUs in two years, and Moonshot's Kimi K2.5 has Brookings' Kyle Chan warning US chip curbs are fizzling—China's AI gap's shrinking fast. Policy shifts are wild: US Senate bills scream Taiwan support amid Trump-Xi chit-chat, while outbound investment rules chill Asia tech flows. Trump's eyeing Blackwell chip holds for domestic ramp-up, and tariffs on Chinese batteries hit 55% from January 1st. Beijing's nudging banks to dump US Treasuries—holdings at a 17-year low of $682 billion—yields spiked to 4.24% today. FTC gripes about zero cyber coop with China, and Trump's pulling from global forums, leaving critical infra exposed. Industry's reeling—Nvidia's Taiwan HQ nods secure TSMC supply, but Congress's AI Overwatch Act could yank licenses anytime. Guangdong's EV and solar exports soared 30%, China's central gov plotting AI job-loss fixes. Strategically? US compute lead's at risk—H200s could supercharge PLA drones and cyber ops. Experts say it's transactional bargaining now: China wields rare earths (70% silver refining), US holds chips. Brookings warns narrowed AI gaps mean potent military apps; ITIF says America's R&D edge is eroding. Future? More tit-for-tat, allies like Netherlands and Japan wobbling on controls. Xi's APEC chair push signals people-first infrastructure plays. Whew, listeners, that's Beijing Bytes—stay sharp out there. Thanks for tuning in, smash that subscribe button 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
  3. 4 DAYS AGO

    Lotus Blooms, Tesla Panics, and Nukes Get Awkward: Why Notepad Just Started World War 3

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your go-to gal for all things China cyber chaos and tech tussles. Buckle up, because the US-China tech war just hit warp speed these past two weeks—think nuclear saber-rattling, car hacks on wheels, and supply chain sneak attacks that'd make a hacker blush. First off, cybersecurity's a dumpster fire. Rapid7 nailed it: a Chinese-linked crew called Lotus Blossom hijacked Notepad++ updates via a compromised Hostinger server, targeting devs since June 2025. Don Ho, the app's creator, spilled that hackers rerouted traffic till December, slipping malware to Southeast Asia and Central America govs, telecoms, even aviation. CISA's scrambling, probing US gov exposure. Then there's DKnife, a slick Linux toolkit from China-nexus actors since 2019, hijacking CentOS routers for espionage on WeChat users and email—man-in-the-middle style, pure AitM gold. Oh, and CISA's BOD 26-02? Federal agencies gotta ditch EOL edge devices like ancient firewalls in 12 months, 'cause China and Russia state hackers love 'em unpatched. Flip to autos: Times of India reports US Commerce's Bureau of Industry and Security drops the hammer March 17—no Chinese software in connected cars. Cameras, mics, GPS? Foreign adversary nightmares. Tesla's already ditched China suppliers for US builds; Pirelli's sweating Sinochem stakes in smart tires. Experts like Finite State's Matt Wyckhouse say suppliers are reshoring teams, but Volvo's Håkan Samuelsson warns: "No data to China, ever." Charles Parton, ex-UK diplomat, calls cellular modules a scarier China dependency than rare earths. Policy shifts? Trump's nixing New START extension, per The Star, demanding a fresh US-Russia-China nuclear pact. Marco Rubio echoes: China's 600 warheads balloon to 1,500 by 2035—bye-bye no-first-strike doctrine. Under Secretary Thomas DiNanno accused Beijing of secret Lop Nur tests since 2020, decoupling seismic signals to dodge CTBT. Retired Admiral Charles Richard testified: "China's growing at breathtaking pace—build up now!" Xi's betting big on hypersonics, fast-breeders, fusion. Space? Tiangong vs. Artemis standoffs had Chinese TV calling US satellite moves "heavenly provocations." Industry hurts: Trump's pressuring TSMC to shift fabs stateside, per Cheng Chi-sheng—tariff plundering, ally or not. Critical minerals? New US trade zone to kneecap China's dominance, pumping billions into MP Materials and Lithium Americas. Strategically? Arms race 2.0, says Acton—US build-up spirals Russia-China ties, like shared early-warning tech and South China Sea bomber drills. AI? China's drafting rules on emotional companion bots to curb addiction, while evworld pushes "cooperation without illusions"—reciprocal data shares, no zero-sum sprint. Forecast: Decoupling accelerates, but exemptions loom for autos. China rejects trilateral talks till parity; expect more tests, router raids. US onshores, but agile Beijing's fusion edge bites back. Witty wager: by summer, we'll see AI nuclear no-go pacts—or moon base skirmishes. 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

    4 min
  4. 6 DAYS AGO

    Cyber Spies Gone Wild: China's Hacker Armies Crash 70 Countries While AI War Gets Messy

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with Beijing Bytes, your go-to for the wild US-China tech war ride. Picture this: it's early February 2026, and the cyber skies are buzzing like a drone swarm over the South China Sea. Just last week, Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 dropped a bombshell on TGR-STA-1030, this shadowy Asian state-backed hacking crew that's breached 70 government and critical infrastructure targets across 37 countries since early 2024. We're talking five national law enforcement agencies, three finance ministries, and even a parliament—phishing, N-day exploits on Microsoft and SAP gear, rootkits for long-term spying. They scanned 155 nations' gov nets in late 2025, zeroing in on economic partners like Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, and Australia's Treasury. GMT+8 timestamps scream Asia, and their focus on trade talks and unrest? Pure espionage gold. But hold onto your firewalls—China's Salt Typhoon crew isn't slacking either. Norway's Police Security Service just confirmed they infiltrated Norwegian orgs via vulnerable network devices, joining the global telecom hacks that snagged US and Canadian politicians' calls. Mustang Panda's phishing diplomats with fake US briefings, and a new DKnife implant's hitting Chinese users' desktops, mobiles, IoT since 2019 for adversary-in-the-middle tricks. Google's Cyber Disruption Unit even nuked IPIDEA, a service overrun by 550+ bad actors weekly, many China-linked for espionage and info ops. Policy ping-pong? At the REAIM summit in Spain, only 35 of 85 nations signed the AI military oversight pledge—US and China sat it out, amid Trump's transatlantic tensions. Dutch Defence Minister Ruben Brekelmans nailed the prisoner's dilemma: Russia and China are sprinting ahead, forcing a rush on AI weapons while dodging rules. Past Hague and Seoul summits got US buy-in but no China; now it's non-binding 20 principles on human control and risk tests, but superpowers say nah. Semis and minerals? Trump's MAGA crew crowed about a rare earths truce—China's "bazooka" exposed US chokepoints, but Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent bets 12-18 months to diversify. Still, Real Instituto Elcano says China's winning: Huawei, SMIC closing the chip gap, Nvidia's H200 exports greenlit for "dues." Trump's pushing allies like Japan, Europe to buy American, hike defense, ditch Chinese tech—tariffs as hammer. Industry's reeling—China's MIIT yanked 24 rogue apps for data grabs, CVERC 69 more, Hainan CAC 22. Courts fined firms for vuln office software hacks, a pharma co for exposed servers. Guangzhou court jailed Ling of A IT company for cracking encrypted IMEI to sell user prefs, netting 680k RMB. Strategically? US accuses China of secret Lop Nur nuclear tests—hundreds-ton yields, hidden vibes—per Under Secretary Thomas DiNanno at Geneva's Conference on Disarmament. Trump's eyeing equal testing with China, Russia, ditching New START for a China-inclusive deal amid Beijing's arsenal boom. Forecast? Experts like Elcano's crew say US export controls backfired, pushing China ahead in AI, semis. Mid-sized nations might forge sovereign AI pacts, bypassing giants. Trump's trade-deterrence blitz could rally allies, but China's restraint-to-predator pivot scares 'em into diversifying. Buckle up, listeners—this war's heating to fusion levels. Thanks for tuning in—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
  5. 4 FEB

    Nuclear Leashes Off: How China's Nuke Tripling and Sneaky Hackers Could Crash Your Portfolio Before 2027

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with Beijing Bytes, your go-to for the wild US-China tech war ride. Picture this: it's early February 2026, New START treaty expires tomorrow on February 5th, and boom—the world's top nuclear powers are off the leash. No more caps on US and Russian warheads, and China's been stealth-tripling its stockpile to around 600 nukes, per Harvard's Matthew Bunn on The Telegraph's Battle Lines podcast. That's not just arms race fuel; it's straight-up tech escalation, with AI sneaking into nuclear command systems, processing intel faster than any human, risking hair-trigger launches. Cyber front's heating up too—whispers from DC intel circles point to fresh Chinese-linked hacks on US quantum research labs in California, mimicking those 2025 SolarWinds vibes but targeting next-gen chip designs. No official claims yet, but FireEye analysts are buzzing about state-sponsored APT41 variants slipping through zero-days in supply chains. Meanwhile, Biden's holdovers rushed out new export curbs last week, slapping Entity List additions on Huawei's Shenzhen fabs and SMIC's 2nm nodes—straight from Commerce Department's January 28th memo. That's choking Beijing's AI chip ambitions, forcing Xi's crew to pivot to domestic CXL interconnects. Industry's reeling: Nvidia's stock dipped 8% after reports of blacklisted H100 GPUs rerouted via Vietnam shell firms got busted. In Beijing, ByteDance engineers are bragging about open-sourcing their own LLM alternatives, dodging US sanctions like pros. Policy shift? Trump's team, fresh off inauguration buzz, signaled no extensions on chip waivers—Putin floated staying within New START limits, but ignored, per RUSI's Darya Dolzikova. Strategic play: US wants parity to hit both Russian silos and China's Yumen launch sites simultaneously; China counters with hypersonic DF-41s tested last month near Lop Nur. Expert take from Bunn: without trilateral talks, we're in a "no-limits" proliferation era, AI automating targeting to outpace defenses. Forecast? By mid-2026, expect US Sentinel ICBM upgrades and China's silo farms in Gansu doubling, sparking cyber volleys that could crash global markets. Ting's witty wager: hackers win before nukes fly—keep your VPNs patched, folks. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more bytes on the frontline. 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

    3 min
  6. 2 FEB

    China's Chip Game Just Got Messy: Nvidia's 25% Deal, Notepad Plus Plus Hack, and Beijing's Spicy Clap Back

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, I'm Ting, and welcome back to Beijing Bytes. We've got a wild two weeks to unpack in the US-China tech war, so let's dive straight in. First up, the chip saga is getting spicier than mapo tofu. The Trump administration just greenlit conditional exports of Nvidia H200 chips to approved Chinese customers in exchange for a twenty-five percent revenue stake. Sounds reasonable until you realize Beijing's basically telling state-linked firms to ignore the deal. Meanwhile, Chinese companies like Huawei and Alibaba are doubling down on domestic alternatives anyway. According to analysis from The Cipher Brief, the export controls that started in October 2022 were supposed to freeze China out of advanced AI chips, but three years later, that strategy looks shakier than anyone in Washington expected. Here's the kicker though. Huawei already shocked everyone in 2023 when they dropped the Mate 60 Pro with a domestically-made seven-nanometer chip from SMIC, proving China was years ahead of what US intelligence assumed. Now Chinese firms are building AI models optimized for locally available processors. DeepSeek released a large language model designed to run without Nvidia's cutting-edge GPUs, showing that smart software optimization can compensate for hardware constraints. The real vulnerability, according to experts cited by HSToday, isn't logic chips but access to advanced manufacturing equipment. That's where Washington needs to focus. But here's where things get genuinely spicy in the cybersecurity department. Chinese government hackers just hijacked Notepad++, the popular open-source text editor, for months between June and December 2025. According to TechCrunch and SecurityWeek, attackers compromised the software update mechanism through a hosting provider breach, delivering malicious updates to users with interests in East Asia. This is basically the 2025 version of the SolarWinds nightmare that hit US government agencies back in 2020. And if that wasn't enough, the Forescout Technologies 2025 Threat Roundup shows China is home to two hundred ten tracked threat actor groups, way more than Russia's one hundred twelve or Iran's fifty-five. They're targeting telecommunications, critical infrastructure, and medical systems with alarming precision. The FCC just warned telecoms to boost cybersecurity as ransomware disruptions hit growing numbers of small and medium-sized providers. The real strategic question isn't whether China can eventually develop world-class chips, because they definitely will. It's whether the US can consolidate its current advantage before Beijing circumvents the restrictions entirely. According to analysts quoted in The Cipher Brief, America still holds the edge in cutting-edge tech, but time is running out. Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Make sure you subscribe for more of this tech drama because trust me, it's only getting wilder. This has been a Quiet Please production. For more, check out quietplease dot 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

    3 min
  7. 1 FEB

    Chips, Spies and TikTok Lies: How Trump Just Flipped the US-China Tech War Upside Down

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here, your go-to gal for all things China cyber chaos and tech tango. Buckle up, because the US-China tech war just hit turbo mode these past two weeks—think chip exemptions, TikTok twists, and spy scandals that'd make a hacker blush. First off, the semiconductor saga: Technopolitik's Bharath Reddy nails it—after years of US export controls flipping like pancakes, Trump's team reversed course, greenlighting advanced Nvidia chips to China with a cheeky 25% tariff. Shockwaves hit when DeepSeek, that plucky Chinese AI whiz, dropped a reasoning model rivaling US labs' best, all at slashdot bargain costs, thanks to sneaky Nvidia tech assists per the US House Select Committee on China. Beijing played smart too—banned domestic firms from Nvidia gear to boost homegrown chips, then exempted ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent. It's Beijing's classic yin-yang: chase semiconductor self-reliance while keeping AI dreams alive globally. But don't pop the champagne—Dutch ASML's EUV lithography lockdown still starves China's sub-7nm chip dreams. Cyber front's a dumpster fire. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott just slapped bans on 26 Chinese firms and AI apps, from DeepSeek (NASA blocked it too for privacy paranoia) to hardware nightmares. NBC News dropped the bomb: US and China inked a TikTok deal on January 22, handing US ops to Trump-backed TikTok USDS Joint Venture LLC with data firewalls and algo safeguards. Yet California Gov. Gavin Newsom's probing alleged Trump-critical post glitches—data center oopsie, TikTok swears. Meanwhile, ex-Google engineer Ding Linwei got convicted for swiping AI blueprints to edge out Amazon, Microsoft, and Nvidia dependency, straight to Chinese startups, as South China Morning Post reports. And TP-Link routers? Commerce Department's eyeing a full US sales ban over China ties, despite no smoking gun—KrebsOnSecurity says it's 50% market share jitters. Industry's reeling: States like Arizona eye broadband blocks, while WTO just faulted Biden-era US clean energy subsidies in China's win. Strategic play? US frays allies with tiered chip curbs, pushing Southeast Asia data centers for Chinese AI hunger. China hedges with Iran tech swaps and trilateral pacts with Russia, per Modern Diplomacy. Experts like Reddy forecast a delicate dance—AI's industry-led wild west trumps state nukes, but military AI lags on org hurdles. Trump's unpredictability? SCMP says it's hedging nations toward Beijing softer spots, maybe birthing a G2 duopoly. Future? More cat-and-mouse: exemptions buy time, bans spark black markets, cyber tit-for-tat escalates. US innovation edge holds, but China's export surplus hit $1.19 trillion—Fortune warns deflation's biting back. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more bytes from the battlefield! 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. 30 JAN

    China's Chip Heist: Spies, Drones, and the 400K GPU Deal That Almost Happened

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here. Let's dive into what's been absolutely wild in the Beijing Bytes universe over the past couple weeks. So first up, we've got this Pentagon report that just dropped saying China's basically gone all in on what they're calling a national total war strategy. The Department of Defense is flagging that China's People's Liberation Army has aligned basically everything, and I mean everything, with military objectives. We're talking civilian industry, infrastructure, tech, governance, the whole enchilada. Their goal according to the Pentagon? Displace the United States as the dominant global power. And here's the kicker, a Taiwan confrontation wouldn't just be missiles and troops. Think cyberattacks, economic coercion, maritime blockades, information control. It's the full spectrum warfare playbook. Now on the tech front, things got spicy fast. The US House just passed the Remote Access Security Act on January 12th. Basically it's closing a loophole that let Chinese companies rent advanced AI chips from US cloud platforms. Kyle Dorosz at Swarm Defense is talking about scaling American drone production to reduce that foreign dependency, and trust me, when the Pentagon's running the first kinetic AI-powered drone strikes on US soil in January, you know this stuff matters. But here's where it gets interesting. The US approved Nvidia's H200 chips for export to China in mid-January, and Reuters reported that between January 28th and 30th, China actually approved imports of around 400,000 H200 chips for ByteDance, Alibaba, and Tencent. Though Chinese customs initially ordered agents to bar entry of those chips, so who knows what's actually happening behind the Great Firewall. The White House slapped a 25 percent tariff on these chip sales, which is their way of making sure they get something out of the deal. Meanwhile, a former Google engineer named Linwei Ding just got convicted of stealing over 2,000 documents containing AI trade secrets for China-linked companies. He downloaded all this stuff in December 2023 right before heading to China to launch his own AI startup called Shanghai Zhisuan Technologies. The Department of Justice says he was even trying to help China develop AI supercomputers and custom machine learning chips. And get this, Check Point Software Research revealed that state-sponsored hackers are literally recruiting American employees from major companies with financial incentives ranging from three thousand to fifteen thousand dollars. It's a recruiting war and we're losing players. The strategic play here is fascinating. While US entrepreneurs are drowning in contradictory regulatory compliance regimes, Chinese AI companies operate under one unified national framework. That's efficiency, listeners. China's pushing for 50 percent domestically produced equipment in chipmaking. They're hedging their bets everywhere. Thanks for tuning in to Beijing Bytes. Make sure you subscribe for more updates on this endless tech showdown. 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 This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

    3 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