Taiwan puts companies behind China's AI ambitions
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Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing faces further controls on its business with China but looks to be making progress on U.S. chip production.
Taiwan has added China's Huawei and SMIC to its trade blacklist in a move that further aligns it with U.S. trade policy and comes amid tensions with Beijing.
Taiwan’s decision deals another setback to Beijing’s efforts to expand its domestic chipmaking capabilities and compete with US firms such as Nvidia, as Huawei and SMIC have already been sanctioned by
On their own they may not amount to a hill of beans. But grouped together, they provide some food for thought. Various incidents have taken place in a
As tension between China and Taiwan grows daily, China’s recent development of a non-nuclear hydrogen bomb has added a new layer of uncertainty.
The two governments continue to publicly accuse each other of cyberattacks against critical infrastructure, in possible preparation for real-world hostilities.
China, meanwhile, has stepped up its own naming efforts. In March, it publicly accused four individuals tied to Taiwan’s military of launching cyberattacks and collecting sensitive information. While public attribution is common in the West, such moves by China are relatively new.