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. 15 GIỜ TRƯỚC

    Chips, Spies and Capitol Lies: How China's Smuggling Nvidia GPUs While Hacking Congress

    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, and it's spicier than a Sichuan hotpot. Picture this: I'm scrolling my feeds on February 27, 2026, and bam—US officials are testifying on Capitol Hill, spilling tea on China's chip smuggling ops. David Peters from the Bureau of Industry and Security admits it's rampant, with advanced Nvidia Blackwell chips allegedly sneaking into DeepSeek's AI models, dodging export bans. Subcommittee Chair Bill Huizenga from Michigan calls it outright theft since China's chips can't compete. Meanwhile, a sneaky cyber hit breached email accounts of US House committee staff—preliminary intel points to Chinese state-sponsored hackers, per early reports from Coinvo and Hokanews. No classified docs confirmed swiped, but those policy chats? Gold for Beijing's spies. Policy plot thickens: Supreme Court just gutted Trump's big tariff dreams under IEEPA, forcing a pivot to a temporary 15% Section 122 surcharge—narrow, 150-day limit. Asia Times says this weakens Trump ahead of his March 31-April 2 Beijing summit with Xi Jinping. China hawk Michael Helberg warns of "China Shock 2.0" flooding Europe and Southeast Asia with cheap BYD EVs and smartphones. Trump's counter? Pax Silica alliance—India jumped in February 20 with Australia, Japan, South Korea, and others to lock down AI supply chains. China's not sitting pretty. Their 2026 Dual-Use Items Catalogue ballooned to 168 pages, slapping new controls on fentanyl precursors, missile molybdenum, indium semis, and bismuth for infrared tech—straight from China Briefing. And get this: CVERC's dropping wild conspiracies, claiming US crypto busts on Binance's Zhao Changpeng (yep, Trump pardoned him) are hegemony ploys to hoard Bitcoin reserves and crush the yuan. Industry's reeling—Manus AI fled China for Meta after US capital bans, per the House China Select Committee. Trump's loosening H200 chip exports to China with caps and fees, Brookings says it's smart if superintelligence ain't knocking tomorrow—Jake Sullivan's fuming, but Nvidia's grinning. Strategically? USMCA 2026 review eyes Mexico for Chinese tech laundering, CSIS warns, tying market access to anti-China alignment. Beijing's accelerating self-reliance in semis and lithography, while we build carrier fleets in the Middle East. Xi's playing chess; Trump's scrambling checkers. Forecast? Summit's high-stakes poker—Trump pivots to entity lists and investment screens, but China's localization rush means tech decoupling deepens. We'll outpace 'em if allies stick tight. 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 phút
  2. 2 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    Hacked Sheets, Scared Chips and Robot Wars: China's Tech Espionage Goes Full Throttle

    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, and Beijing Bytes is diving straight in. First off, cybersecurity's exploding like a rogue backdoor. Google’s Threat Intelligence Group and Mandiant just smoked out UNC2814—aka Gallium—a slick China-linked crew that's been prowling for a decade. These hackers breached 53 orgs across 42 countries, hitting telecom giants and governments from Africa to the Americas. Their ninja move? Hiding GRIDTIDE malware in Google Sheets API calls—reading commands from cell A1, exfiling data to V1, all disguised as legit SaaS traffic. Google seized their cloud projects and sinkholed domains last week, but they warn it'll take years to rebuild that global footprint. Oh, and Singapore confirmed all four major telcos got pwned in a coordinated espionage blitz, while Poland's wind farms and power plants leaked via default creds—no MFA, exposed OT interfaces. CISA's screaming at US energy ops to segment IT/OT now. Strategic play? Pure intel goldmine for tracking persons of interest, echoing Salt Typhoon vibes. Shifting gears to restrictions: Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick's crew is rallying US robot makers for a March 10 roundtable in DC, eyeballing supply chain fixes against China's subsidized bot blitz. Apptronik's boss and Standard Bots CEO are pushing tariffs or bans on Chinese humanoids—Congress revived the Robotics Caucus, and a Senate bill bars feds from using China/Russia bots. Meanwhile, Trump's deferring some AI tech measures, irking lawmakers who say it guts national security. Export controls limbo: BIS's AI Diffusion Rule lingers "on the books" despite non-enforcement promises, with KYC screens now gating Nvidia chip sales to China data centers. Watch for case-by-case reviews vetting military ties—hypersonics, nukes, EW all in the crosshairs. Industry quake? Taiwan chip panic's real—NYT reports Apple’s Tim Cook, Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, AMD’s Lisa Su, and Qualcomm’s Cristiano Amon got CIA’s William Burns and DNI Avril Haines briefing on 2027 invasion risks. TSMC pumps 90% of advanced semis; a blockade cripples Silicon Valley. Trump's new 15% tariffs (plus national security hits on batteries) jolt climate tech, while China rolls MIIT rules from March 1 for tech contract registration to snag VAT exemptions and CIT cuts. Expert take: CSIS says team up with Japan/Europe on robots; ITIF wants Chinese bot bans. Forecasts? US pushes "good enough" AI stacks via CHIPS cash, but China's cheap LLMs and agentic AI—like OpenClaw flaws and NIST's new standards—compress timelines. CrowdStrike clocks breakout at 29 minutes; identity governance is king. Whew, listeners, the bots, hacks, and chips are rewriting the rules—US leads software smarts, but China's scale is ferocious. Stay vigilant! Thanks for tuning in—subscribe for more Beijing Bytes heat. 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 phút
  3. 4 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    Supreme Court Sabotage, Backdoor Betrayals, and Why Your VPN Might Be Spying on You

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, I'm Ting, and welcome back to Beijing Bytes. The past two weeks have been absolutely bonkers in the US-China tech war, so let's dive straight in. First up, the Supreme Court just threw a wrench into everything on February twentieth. The Court ruled six to three that Trump exceeded his authority using the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to slap tariffs on China. That means the ten percent fentanyl tariff and reciprocal duties are gone. But here's the thing—Trump immediately pivoted and signed a proclamation for a temporary fifteen percent global tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act. According to China-Briefing, China's Ministry of Commerce is now evaluating the impact, and this whole situation could force renegotiation of their October trade agreement. The tariff on Chinese goods drops from thirty-six point eight percent to twenty-nine point seven percent trade-weighted average, though some products like EVs still face over one hundred percent duties. Now let's talk cybersecurity nightmares. According to TechCrunch reporting on Bloomberg's investigation, Chinese hackers breached Ivanti's Pulse Secure subsidiary back in February twenty twenty-one by planting a secret backdoor in their VPN software. They compromised one hundred nineteen other organizations, including European and US military contractors. Mandiant was aware and alerted Ivanti, but the breach shows how cost-cutting after Clearlake Capital Group's private equity acquisition in twenty seventeen left critical security gaps. It's a cautionary tale that echoes what happened with Citrix after their twenty twenty-two buyout by Elliott Investment Management and Vista Equity Partners. The cyberattacks are getting scarier. According to the reporting from Innovate Cybersecurity, suspected Chinese-linked actors exploited a hardcoded credential flaw in Dell RecoverPoint since mid-twenty twenty-four, deploying a backdoor called Grimbolt. Meanwhile, AWS disclosed that a Russian-speaking threat actor breached over six hundred Fortinet FortiGate firewalls across fifty-five countries using generative AI to automate lateral movement without even needing sophisticated exploits. On the industrial front, according to the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation, non-American multinationals like Inventec are getting caught between US-China tensions. Inventec is building server production in Texas, but they're simultaneously deepening ties in China's ecosystem, creating what experts call supply chain stickiness. That's Beijing's strategy—let production diversify geographically while keeping control over high-value technological chokepoints. The broader implication? The US-China tech competition is moving beyond tariffs and chip export restrictions into supply chain architecture, talent acquisition, and infrastructure security. Both nations are playing long-term chess while the rest of the world watches which move comes next. Thanks for tuning in, listeners. Make sure to subscribe for more Beijing Bytes updates. 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

    4 phút
  4. 5 NGÀY TRƯỚC

    Tariffs Tanked, Hackers Lurked: Trumps Summit Showdown with Xi Gets Spicy

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with Beijing Bytes, your witty dive into the US-China tech war frenzy. Buckle up—it's been a wild two weeks ending February 22, 2026, with tariffs flipping, hackers lurking, and chips sparking summit drama. Picture this: I'm sipping baijiu in my Beijing hacker den when the Supreme Court drops a bombshell on February 20, striking down President Trump's sweeping tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Poof—those IEEPA levies on Chinese goods vanish, giving Xi Jinping serious leverage ahead of Trump's March 31 White House-to-Beijing summit with him. Trump, furious, slaps a temporary 10% global tariff, then hikes it to 15%, ranting about China's surpluses rebuilding their army. But experts like Sun Yun from the Stimson Center say it's a moral boost for Beijing—they're prepped for no real change, while Wendy Cutler from Asia Society Policy Institute bets on Plan B via the USTR's Section 301 probe into China's Phase One trade deal flops. Tech restrictions? Mixed bag. Trump promised Vietnam's To Lam during their White House meet to yank Hanoi off the advanced tech export control list—huge for semiconductors and jets, with Vietnamese airlines inking $37 billion Boeing deals. Meanwhile, Section 232 tariffs hit hard: 25% on logic integrated circuits and semiconductor gear effective January 15, exempting US data centers and startups. Ship-to-shore gantry cranes from China? 100% duties delayed to November, per USTR's October notice. De minimis exemptions for cheap Chinese imports? Gutted—now 54% duties or $100 per postal item since May. Cyber front's pure chaos. China-linked hackers, per Google's threat intel and Mandiant, exploited Dell's zero-day CVE-2026-22769 in RecoverPoint software since mid-2024, dropping BRICKSTORM backdoors and SLAYSTYLE webshells for espionage. January reports from Eurasia Review exposed state-linked crews hacking Downing Street aides' phones for years. Poland bans Chinese cars from military sites over data fears, and France's FICOBA registry leak hit 1.2 million bank accounts. Industry's reeling—US firms eye exemptions, Chinese polysilicon and robotics under threat. China doubles down on e-CNY, banning offshore RMB stablecoins and tightening RWA tokenization, per Crypto News regs this February. Strategically? US pushes CFTC Clarity Act for crypto clarity, but Beijing rejects "gunboat diplomacy," per Modern Diplomacy. Xi's team will demand Nvidia H200 chips, eased Huawei bans, and Taiwan restraint. Sun Yun forecasts cautious talks—China wants rare earth flows for concessions. Long-term, it's redlines on Taiwan Strait crises, USNI warns, with Trump eyeing export controls if Beijing squeezes magnets. Forecast? Summit could thaw chips, but cyber ops escalate—expect more zero-days. US tech edge holds if Clarity Act passes by spring, per Treasury's Scott Bessent. Witty takeaway: In this war, hackers win coffee breaks, but tariffs? They're the real backdoor exploit. 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 phút
  5. 20 THG 2

    Beijing's Veto Power: How China Just Got the Keys to US Tech While Trump Does a Complete 180

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with your Beijing Bytes update on what's been absolutely wild in the US-China tech arena these past couple weeks. So picture this: the Trump administration just pulled off what I can only describe as a spectacular about-face on tech security. According to reporting from Reuters, Commerce Department leadership instructed staffers focused on foreign tech threats to basically pivot away from China and concentrate on Iran and Russia instead. Meanwhile, they're shelving key security measures that would've blocked Chinese equipment from American data centers. Yeah, you heard that right. Beijing essentially got a veto on US tech policy. The Commerce Department decided against banning China Telecom operations here and put holds on proposed restrictions against China Unicom and China Mobile. Former Trump deputy national security advisor Matt Pottinger called it perfectly, saying we're actually letting Beijing acquire new leverage over our AI, datacenter, and EV infrastructure while desperately trying to remove ourselves from their rare earth supply chains. Talk about strategic whiplash. But here's where it gets spicy. There's actually push-back happening through official channels. The FAR Council just proposed a rule that would ban government purchases of semiconductors from Chinese companies like SMIC, CXMT, and YMTC starting December 2027. Comments are due April twentieth, and this reflects real congressional concern about backdoors and malicious firmware embedded in chips used by defense and telecom systems. On the offensive side, the Trump administration announced something called the Tech Corps, essentially transforming Peace Corps into a STEM pipeline to promote American AI tools globally and counter China's Digital Silk Road expansion. The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy is pushing what they call real AI sovereignty in developing nations. Now the cybersecurity nightmare keeps escalating. Unit 42 found that eighty-seven percent of the seven hundred fifty incident responses they handled last year involved multiple attack surfaces, with identity weaknesses factoring into nearly ninety percent of investigations. Chinese-aligned groups are getting sophisticated, using malware like Brickstorm to hide command and control traffic. Google's Mandiant team documented that suspected China-nexus operators have been exploiting a Dell RecoverPoint vulnerability since mid-two thousand twenty-four, deploying backdoors and tools like Grimbolt. There's also the weird stuff, like reports of smart vapes potentially being used as data breach vectors according to US government officials who believe these devices can connect to smartphones and install malware. The fundamental tension here is this prisoner's dilemma on AI that both nations are locked in. The US is pursuing techno-nationalist dominance through the American AI stack while China pushes for technological self-reliance. Neither wants to fall behind, so acceleration continues. Thanks for tuning in listeners, make sure you subscribe for more updates on this ongoing tech showdown. 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

    4 phút
  6. 16 THG 2

    Ting's Tech Tea: US Caves on China Bans While Beijing's Hackers Party Like Its Tianfu Cup Finals

    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. Picture this: it's mid-February 2026, and the US-China tech war just hit a plot twist faster than a DeepSeek AI hallucination. Over the past two weeks, Washington's suddenly soft-pedaling some bans, while Beijing's hackers and innovators keep stacking wins like it's a Tianfu Cup high score. Let's kick off with the drama in DC. The Federal Register dropped an updated list of Chinese Military Companies on Friday—naming heavyweights like Alibaba, Baidu, and BYD as security risks—but poof, it vanished hours later after a government pullback, per The Register. Whispers from Reuters say the US might lift bans on China Telecom's operations stateside and even greenlight TP-Link gear sales. This flips the script on Trump's old Clean Network policy from 2020, which tried to boot Chinese carriers and clouds to shield US data. Analysts buzz it's a negotiation ploy ahead of a Trump-Xi summit. Smart move? Or just buying time while Salt Typhoon's ghosts from last year still haunt telecom nets? Cyber front's lit too. Google's Threat Intelligence Group straight-up calls China the top dog in cyber ops volume, hammering US defense industrial base with drone tech steals and edge device zero-days, outpacing Iran, North Korea, and Russia. Palo Alto's Unit 42 spotted TGR-STA-1030 espionage hitting 70 orgs in 37 countries—tools like Behinder scream China nexus—but they chickened out on naming Beijing, fearing retaliation, Reuters reports. Meanwhile, China's Tianfu Cup hacking contest roared back government-run by the Ministry of Public Security, fueling fears they're hoarding zero-days under 2021 laws for spy ops, says The Hacker News. And Check Point clocked 678 ransomware hits globally last month, half in North America—coincidence? Policy shifts? US is shelving China Telecom bans and equipment curbs, per AOL and Reuters, amid APEC pushes for AI funding to counter Beijing. But China's not sweating—DeepSeek's cheapo LLM crushed US rivals at a tenth the cost, per Cyrus Janssen's Substack, proving efficiency trumps burn rate. Huawei's stacking chips for AI parity, domestic lithography machines breaking US containment, and NVIDIA's Jensen Huang admits betting against them is dumb. Robotics? Humanoids leaped from stiff dances at 2025 Spring Gala to fluid beasts by 2026—China's industrializing labor while we debate. Industry impacts hit hard: ChangXin and Yangtze Memory off the blacklist means US DRAM buyers get cheap Chinese RAM, threatening prices. EVs flood Europe, cracking Canada's 100% tariffs; Tesla's sweating. IBM's Chen Xudong vows to "conquer" China with AI silos busted for exporters. Strategically? US risks a sovereignty gap in AI statecraft, Lawfare warns, as China's speed-scale innovation—semis, robots, energy grids—compounds momentum. Forecasts? If bans ease, Xi-Trump talks could thaw trade, but cyber espionage ramps; Beijing pulls ahead in deployment, we chase hype. West's isolation? Busted—global south routes around it. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more byte-sized breakdowns! 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 phút
  7. 15 THG 2

    Ting Spills: DeepSeek Slurps ChatGPT Secrets, Pentagon's Blacklist Drama, and Why Nvidia's Sweating China's AI Glow-Up

    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, and it's got more twists than a Beijing back alley hacker sprint. First off, cybersecurity's exploding like bad dim sum. OpenAI dropped a bombshell memo to the US House Select Committee on February 12, accusing China's DeepSeek AI—yep, that hotshot firm—of "distillation" tricks, slurping up ChatGPT APIs like free bubble tea to steal American R&D secrets and pump out pro-CCP propaganda ahead of their V4 model launch. Schneier on Security flagged AI coding assistants from China secretly shipping 1.5 million devs' code straight to Beijing servers—talk about a sneaky backdoor party. And don't sleep on Singapore's telcos: M1, Singtel, StarHub, and StarHub got deep-probed by China-linked UNC3886 spies, per the Cyber Security Agency. Stateside, BeyondTrust's fresh RCE vuln CVE-2026-1731 got patched after China-nexus crews eyed it, echoing that 2024 Treasury hack via their tools. Policy ping-pong? The Pentagon teased then yanked an updated blacklist of China military helpers—adding Baidu, Alibaba, BYD, WuXi AppTec, and RoboSense—only to pull CXMT and YMTC chips after hawkish backlash. White House's Chris McGuire called the removals an "error," while Eric Sayers from American Enterprise Institute bets the big adds like Alibaba stick, signaling Trump's softened stance post-Xi trade truce. Shelved bans on China Telecom US ops and gear sales to data centers? Reuters says it's all de-escalation ahead of Trump's China visit. Industry's reeling: Nvidia's Jensen Huang admitted China's pulling ahead in AI deployment, with BYD smoking Tesla in EVs. Beijing's SAMR slapped tech giants for "involution"—that cutthroat AI giveaway frenzy pre-Lunar New Year—pushing fair play over price wars. Rare earths? Jack Hidary at SandboxAQ says US AI and quantum could synth substitutes, cracking China's 85% refining stranglehold that chokes our magnets and grids, per Policy Center's Otaviano Canuto. Strategically, it's a Global South slugfest—China embeds AI in robotics and batteries, US clings to chip crowns but grid-lags on AI power hogs. Brussels Morning warns 2026's AI threats: adaptive malware, deepfake phish from Beijing bots. Forecast? Expect US export tweaks, more OpenAI-style callouts, and middle powers like those 37 govs breached by Asian spies picking sides. China scales industrial AI; America innovates but must integrate or get left in the dust. Thanks for tuning in, listeners—subscribe for more bytes from 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 phút
  8. 13 THG 2

    Trump Hits Pause on China Tech Bans While CIA Hunts PLA Spies and DeepSeek Drama Explodes

    This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast. Hey listeners, Ting here with Beijing Bytes, your snappy dive into the US-China tech tango that's got everyone on edge. Picture this: it's mid-February 2026, and the Trump admin just hit the pause button on a slew of anti-China tech curbs right before President Trump's April powwow with Xi Jinping in Beijing. Reuters spills the tea—shelved are bans on China Telecom's US ops, limits on Chinese gear in American data centers, TP-Link routers, China Unicom and China Mobile's internet biz, even Chinese electric trucks and buses. All this after last October's trade truce, where China eased up on rare-earth exports. White House insiders say it's to chill tensions, but former Trump deputy Matt Pottinger warns data centers could turn into "remotely controlled islands of Chinese digital sovereignty," prime for AI sabotage or IP theft. Cyber front's exploding too. CIA Director John Ratcliffe dropped a slick YouTube vid called "Save the Future," luring mid-level PLA officers to spill beans via secure channels—third one targeting Chinese brass. Beijing's Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian fired back, vowing "all necessary measures" against US spies, while embassy rep Liu Pengyu called it a sovereignty smash. Echoes of CIA's network wipeout by China from 2010-2012. Meanwhile, Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 sniffed out "TGR-STA-1030," a shadowy Asia-based crew—wink wink, GMT+8 timezone, hits on Czechia post-Dalai Lama meet and Thailand before a Beijing trip—reconning 37 countries' govs and infra. They dialed back blaming China publicly after Beijing banned their software last month, fearing client blowback. SentinelOne's Tom Hegel links it to Beijing's global intel grabs. Taiwan's yelling "digital siege rehearsal" over China's cyber probes, per The Record. Policy-wise, Treasury's tightening clean energy tax credits under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act—no subsidies if you're sourcing from "prohibited foreign entities" like Chinese firms in solar polysilicon, batteries, wind turbines. Aims to onshore the whole chain, from minerals to modules, boosting US energy independence amid Trump's APEC push for AI and maritime tech exports in southern China. Industry's reeling: OpenAI memos to Congress flag DeepSeek ripping off ChatGPT models. Palo Alto tiptoes, US Navy budgets cyber fleet boosts. Experts like Wendy Cutler from Asia Society see stabilization bids, but Dems slam Trump for sidelining China hawks. Strategically? US risks leverage loss in AI/data race while China rehearses disruptions—think Volt Typhoon in US grids. Forecast: April summit extends truce, but cyber shadow wars amp up. Trump woos, Xi stonewalls—classic tech Cold War 2.0. Witty wager: by summer, we'll see Huawei backdoor headlines or DeepSeek dethroning GPT. 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 phút

Giới Thiệu

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