By CreativeSeven @Adobe Stock

China is rapidly closing the AI gap with the US, backed by state funding, open-source models, and massive infrastructure, according to Bloomberg. In response, the US is ramping up data center construction, AI investment, and deregulation. Both countries see AI as vital to global power and national security, fueling a high-stakes tech race. They write:

Itโ€™s been almost three years since the US kicked off the artificial intelligence boom, and most of the world is still struggling to catch up. Only one country is close to matching the US in AI development: China.

Chinese firms such as DeepSeek,ย Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.ย and Moonshot have released AI models that approach the capabilities of leading systems from US companies, spurred on by a government that has made AI leadership a national priority. To that end, itโ€™s rolling out a package of generous state support and a national network of interlinked data processing hubs.

Chinaโ€™s ascendance has set off alarm bells in Silicon Valley and Washington.ย  […]

Whether the US will press ahead with new mandates on chips remains an open question. Trumpโ€™s desire for a deal with China means further curbs on chips are unlikely before the expected summit this fall, according to Chris Miller, professor of international history at Tufts University and author ofย Chip War.

โ€œThe administration has many priorities and itโ€™s hard to see which is going to win out,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s very clear that the White House is going to try to balance the hawksโ€™ desire for restrictions with the broader US-China relationship.โ€

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