HomeNewsOpinionChina’s AI strength suggests US curbs could backfire

China’s AI strength suggests US curbs could backfire

Washington shouldn’t discount how imposing scarcity all too often breeds innovation

June 26, 2024 / 16:32 IST
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artificial intelligence
AI has emerged as a global national security imperative.

US officials and tech leaders have spent much of this year celebrating the success of all-out efforts to stifle China’s AI ambitions.

But it’s too soon to count Beijing out of the race, and American attempts to limit China’s progress have pushed the nation to advance in creating a homegrown ecosystem at a time when developing sovereign AI has emerged as a global national security imperative. It would be unwise to underestimate the stakes for China, especially when the technology is still in its infancy.

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At a developer conference last Friday, the chairman of Huawei Technologies Co’s consumer business arm, Richard Yu, said the tech giant — long kneecapped by US restrictions — has taken 10 years do what it took European and American counterparts 30 years. Yu touted Huawei’s latest processers as 1.1 times more effective in training AI models compared to other offerings on the market. (Notably, Yu stopped short of naming specifics here, while previous Bloomberg News reporting suggests costly and mixed results in the firm’s semiconductor push). But Huawei’s race to develop its own chips has also surprised industry watchers, and even caught the attention of Jensen Huang, the chief executive officer of AI’s golden child, Nvidia Corp.

Separately, Chinese quant firm High-Flyer Capital Management quietly released an open-source AI model earlier this month dubbed DeepSeek Coder V2 that impressed much of the global tech community with its ability to write code and do math. Its developers also claim it beat competitors at common benchmarks — at a fraction of the cost of other tools developed by US tech giants, and despite the intense restrictions on access to chips from Washington.