On the campaign trail last year, President Donald Trump talked tough about imposing tariffs as high as 60% on Chinese goods and threatened to renew the trade war with China that he launched during his first term.
Artificial intelligence experts say China may have copied American technology to build DeepSeek, the Chinese A.I. app that made waves on Wall Street this week. But some experts don't believe there was theft.
Joe Biden made several attempts to curb Chinese AI advancement, but DeepSeek's launch has put those policies into question.
Eyck Freymann is a Hoover Fellow at Stanford University and Nonresident Research Fellow with the China Maritime Studies Institute at the U.S. Naval War College. Hugo Bromley is an Applied History Research Fellow at the Center for Geopolitics at the University of Cambridge.
Trump calls tariffs America's "big power over China," but analysts say Beijing may be better prepared than ever to engage in a trade war with the U.S.
Trump crypto and AI ‘czar’ David Sacks discusses China's DeepSeek model raising alarm bells in the United States on 'The Ingraham Angle.'
Deepseek collects similar data to American-based AI models, but Chinese laws could make that data more accessible to the government.
President Donald Trump's nominee to run the Commerce Department, Howard Lutnick, said on Wednesday that Canada and Mexico can avoid looming U.S. tariffs if they act swiftly to close their borders to fentanyl,
The project is part of Thailand's broader strategy to bolster links with China, its largest trading partner, as it strives to keep pace with regional peers.
People across China have taken to social media to hail the success of its homegrown tech startup DeepSeek and its founder, after the company unveiled its newest artificial intelligence model, sending shock waves through Silicon Valley and Wall Street.
U.S. companies were spooked when the Chinese startup released models said to match or outperform leading American ones at a fraction of the cost.