China, DeepSeek and R1
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NVIDIA discloses more China risks
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A bit silly perhaps, but the dance represents a serious step for China’s tech industry. After years of American companies like Boston Dynamics Inc. leading the development of hu
In the high-stakes arena of AI, a fascinating new narrative is emerging. Google's recent I/O prominently featured Chinese AI models alongside U.S. tech stalwarts.
The report called the “Made in China 2025” plan, which increased the country’s share of industries like drones and electric vehicles, “far-reaching and harmful”. Such grievances help explain why President Donald Trump hit China with punishing tariffs in April.
The tightening of U.S. chip export controls on China has forced Chinese artificial intelligence developers such as DeepSeek to get creative, finding more efficient ways to train AI models on limited computing resources.
Nvidia and AMD will soon begin selling new GPUs made for AI workloads in China to comply with US chip export restrictions.
China creates artificial intelligence system to oversee nuclear warhead detection despite concerns it could leak tech secrets
Texts from simultaneous interpretation generated by a large language model for AI interpretation of a Guangxi-based technology company are displayed during an international conference in Nanning, south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, May 13, 2025. (Xinhua/Huang Haoming)
China’s Supreme People’s Court (SPC) released the “Typical cases on the fifth anniversary of the promulgation of the Civil Code” ( 民法典颁布五周年典型案例) including one generative AI case in which the Beijing Internet Court held that an AI-generated voice infringed a dubber’s personality rights.
Chinese solar panels, electric vehicles and drones are better than those made in the U.S. Is AI next?
One of the biggest stories this week in the HPC-AI world involves — surprise! — NVIDIA. Actually, make that two or three of the biggest stories. One is NVIDIA’s stellar quarterly earnings announcement in the face of concerns in recent months about disruption of chip exports of GPUs to China.
The authorities have pledged to target people cashing in on claims the technology could predict the questions for the national gaokao exam.