Biden set to focus on semiconductors not tanks in competition with China | Myanmar's post-coup technological authoritarianism | British scientists working with China's nuclear research institute
Biden set to focus on semiconductors not tanks in competition with China | Myanmar's post-coup technological authoritarianism | British scientists working with China's nuclear research institute
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Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. The Biden administration is moving to put semiconductors, artificial intelligence and next-generation networks at the heart of U.S. strategy toward Asia, attempting to rally what officials are calling “techno-democracies” to stand up to China and other “techno-autocracies.” The new framing for the U.S. rivalry with China has been given added urgency by the sudden global shortage of microchips needed in products such as cars, mobile phones and refrigerators. The strategy would seek to rally an alliance of nations fighting for an edge in semiconductor fabrication and quantum computing, upending traditional arenas of competition such as missile stockpiles and troop numbers.
Biden set to focus on semiconductors not tanks in competition with China | Myanmar's post-coup technological authoritarianism | British scientists working with China's nuclear research institute
Biden set to focus on semiconductors not…
Biden set to focus on semiconductors not tanks in competition with China | Myanmar's post-coup technological authoritarianism | British scientists working with China's nuclear research institute
Follow us on Twitter. The Daily Cyber Digest focuses on the topics we work on, including cyber, critical technologies & strategic issues like foreign interference. The Biden administration is moving to put semiconductors, artificial intelligence and next-generation networks at the heart of U.S. strategy toward Asia, attempting to rally what officials are calling “techno-democracies” to stand up to China and other “techno-autocracies.” The new framing for the U.S. rivalry with China has been given added urgency by the sudden global shortage of microchips needed in products such as cars, mobile phones and refrigerators. The strategy would seek to rally an alliance of nations fighting for an edge in semiconductor fabrication and quantum computing, upending traditional arenas of competition such as missile stockpiles and troop numbers.