Economic power and geopolitical games in the age of AI
The AI revolution has sparked a new Cold War between superpowers, reshaping global economics and geopolitics through algorithms, data, and computing power rather than traditional military might
The AI revolution has sparked a new Cold War between superpowers, reshaping global economics and geopolitics through algorithms, data, and computing power rather than traditional military might
China isn’t just following the AI race—it’s accelerating. With tech giants like Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent, the game is changing fast, and the U.S. knows it
China claims to have developed silicon-free chips that outperform Intel and TSMC’s best. If true, this breakthrough could redefine AI, supercomputing, and global supply chains. But is this innovation real or just hype?
The release of DeepSeek R1 has sparked critical reflections from Nobel laureate Daron Acemoglu, raising profound questions about AI innovation, U.S. tech strategies, and even the future of global technological leadership
Economist Michael Roberts argues that DeepSeek R1, China’s latest AI model, upends assumptions about AI development costs and exclusivity. With lower expenses and open-source access, it challenges U.S. tech giants’ dominance
In AI and robotics, China isn’t just catching up—it’s taking the lead. With DeepSeek outpacing U.S. tech giants and Unitree’s humanoid robots dancing rings around the competition, the global tech order is evolving fast
DeepSeek’s R1 model is shaking the AI industry, cutting training costs to $5 million and rivaling Western tech giants with efficient, groundbreaking innovations
China has decided to invest $47.5 billion (¥ 344 billion) into a state-backed semiconductor industry investment fund to gain full self-reliance in the critical field of artificial intelligence