China, AI and Nvidia
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China’s censorship and surveillance were already intense. AI is turbocharging those systems
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.
Nvidia on Wednesday published new data showing that its latest artificial intelligence server can improve the performance of new models - including two popular ones from China - by 10 times. The data comes as the AI world has shifted its focus from training AI models,
Having placed artificial intelligence at the centre of its own economic strategy, China is driving efforts to create an international system to govern the technology’s use.
China's designs on supremacy in artificial intelligence could be hindered by a funding gap in the sector, according to former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, who gave a grim assessment of the country's AI prospects as China and the US lock horns for dominance.
Welcome to Tech In Depth, our daily newsletter about the business of tech from Bloomberg’s journalists around the world. Today, Vlad Savov recaps a deep dive report from Bloomberg Intelligence on China’s AI scene.
While the U.S. and China may be at the center of the AI boom, they don’t have a monopoly on AI innovation. As businesses seek to strengthen their AI capabilities, leaders shouldn’t overlook the many other countries that excel in different aspects of AI.
Nvidia stock was gaining amid reports it won a major political battle over restriction on exports of AI chips.
Advanced Micro Devices CEO Lisa Su on Thursday said the company has licenses to ship some of its MI 308 chips to China and is prepared to pay a 15% tax to the U.S. government if it ships them.
The US and China are battling for AI dominance, but there's still plenty of opportunity for latecomers like Japan. NHK Deputy Chief Commentator IIDA Kaori explains.