Chinese Challenger To Nvidia Mints A New Billionaire
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Chinese authorities are using artificial intelligence to turbocharge surveillance and censorship, with the technology predicting public demonstrations and monitoring prison inmates, according to a new report.
But the Beijing-based company’s broader goal has been the development of a larger, partially reusable rocket to meet China’s growing appetite for satellite services. LandSpace finds itself in a crowded field of competitors, with China’s legacy state-owned rocket developers and a slate of venture-backed startups also in the mix.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang lobbied Trump and Republican senators to allow sales of advanced AI chips to China, arguing export restrictions won’t slow Beijing’s advancement.
Australia's Fortescue said on Wednesday that it would cooperate with a subsidiary of China Baowu, the world's largest steelmaker, to explore new green technology for accelerating decarbonisation in the hard-to-abate steel industry.
China’s leading technology firms are quietly moving some of their most advanced AI development abroad, turning Southeast Asia into a major new hub for
Generative AI is poised to reshape the supply of premium screen content, with VP of Chinese online media giant Tencent and CEO of Tencent Video Sun Zhonghuai forecasting that as much as a third of long-form film and animation could be "dominated by or deeply involving AI" within two years,
This week may go down as the beginning of one of those calendar-compressing occasions, for it was when LandSpace became the first non-American firm to attempt to return a rocket stage to Earth for reuse, and thereby break America’s grip on the market for cheap satellite launches. Space Pioneer also has such a vehicle ready for launch.
Seven Chinese universities plan to launch an "embodied intelligence" major as Beijing races to build a pipeline of robotics and AI talent.
Chinese-linked hackers used sophisticated malware to penetrate and maintain long-term access to unnamed government and information technology entities, U.S. and Canadian cybersecurity agencies said on Thursday.
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes is suing online retailer Temu and its parent company PDD Holdings Inc., claiming the Chinese company is stealing customers' data and violating state consumer protection laws.