China’s AI Game-Changer DeepSeek Quietly Updates R1 Model
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AI, NVIDIA and China
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China market is home to 50% of world's AI researchers
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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.
China on Thursday announced a plan to establish an artificial intelligence (AI) application cooperation center together with member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and pledged to ramp up cooperation in providing open-source services among them in order to deepen technology integration.
Nina Schick, who is an author, adviser, and speaker specializing in generative AI, tells Madison Mills and Interactive Brokers chief strategist Steve Sosnick that the US–China tech race is the "most important geopolitical story" of the 21st century.
Nvidia remains the bellwether for the artificial intelligence trade, but its latest quarterly results reflect both the company’s continued dominance and the mounting headwinds it faces from export restrictions and margin pressures.
Nvidia reported strong results despite a multibillion-dollar hit tied to U.S. regulations on sales of its AI chip to China.
Once an auto underdog, the country’s current dominance of the global electric-vehicle market says a lot about why it brims with confidence in other fields.
Hearing about artificial intelligence from inside Chinese business paints a very different picture of the tech than popularly understood.