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NVIDIA Preps New, More Powerful Chip for China
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About 500 robot athletes from 16 countries competed in Beijing as the United States and China race against each other to shape the future of AI.
Marketplace’s Jennifer Pak asks Chinese AI companies what they think about the humans who will lose jobs to their AI products.
Sam Altman has cautioned against the use of export controls and has warned that China can probably build inference capacity faster than the U.S..
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Futurism on MSNThe US May Have Already Lost the AI Race to China Due to a Key Weakness
As some in the US agonize over the country's pace in the "AI race," it seems China is already standing at the podium.
The percentage of stocks in the Shanghai and Shenzhen composite indexes hitting fresh one-year highs this week has reached their highest levels since 2021 and 2020, respectively — excluding the record-breaking surge in October. Momentum is robust as well, with nearly 90% of all index members trading above their 50-day moving averages.
But as their new plans illustrate, that competition may also divide the world into competing realms of AI products and governance.
In the fast-paced AI wars, time is precious. So when Google last month said it would pay Windsurf $2.4 billion to license the prominent AI startup’s technology and hire some of its employees, the search giant hurried to add Windsurf’s researchers and engineers to its ranks.
U.S. companies and policymakers are mobilizing their response to free-to-use AI models from China.
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Nvidia, AMD to pay U.S. government 15% of China AI chip sales in an unusual export agreement
The agreement between the chipmakers and the U.S. government will allow Nvidia and AMD to obtain export licenses to resume sales to China.
China's cutting edge large language model DeepSeek AI predicts surprising price movements for XRP, Stellar and Dogecoin by end of August.
Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) is one of the Trending AI Stocks in Focus This Week. On August 19, Reuters reported that Tesla has started accepting orders for its new Model Y L in China.
In a surprising reversal of the United States’ years-long technology restrictions on China, President Donald Trump last month allowed Nvidia to resume sales of a key AI chip designed specifically for the Chinese market.