NVIDIA AI chips worth $1bn smuggled to China
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Tech firms huge and small will converge in Shanghai this weekend to showcase their artificial intelligence innovations and support China's booming AI sector as it faces U.S. sanctions.
HANNA DOHMEN is a Senior Research Analyst at Georgetown’s Center for Security and Emerging Technology and a Nonresident Fellow at the Atlantic Council.
Yet while the U.S. appears to focus on powerful yet proprietary large language models, enterprise AI, and semiconductors, China is taking a vastly different approach to cultivating its AI industry.
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President Donald Trump's plan to counter China's AI dominance includes an executive order to prevent "woke AI" in the federal government.
From drone swarms and AI-assisted command systems to biotech on the battlefield, the next great war may be determined by algorithms rather than traditional military might.
The AI Action Plan offers a path, but not a concrete plan, for what the administration is thinking when it comes to chip export restrictions.
Star founders, Beijing officials and deep-pocketed financiers converge on Shanghai by the thousands this weekend to attend China’s most important AI summit. At the top of the agenda: how to propel Beijing’s ambitions to leapfrog the US in artificial intelligence — and profit off that drive.
China is working to merge man and machine through brain-computer interface technology, as part of the country's ongoing efforts to compete in the AI race.