“Although these restrictions create problems, they also pushed creativity and stability, coordinating China’s broader political purposes to achieve technological independence.”
The second largest economy in the world has invested large funds in large technologies – from batteries that nourish electric cars and solar panels to AI.
The inclusion of China in the superpowers of technology has long become the ambition of President Xi Jinping, so Washington’s restrictions were also the problem that Beijing took over.
According to Gregory with Allen, an expert on II at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the release of a new Deepseek model was scheduled on January 20, when Donald Trump swore as president.
“The terms and the way it is reported is exactly what the Chinese government wants everyone to think – that export control does not work and that America is not the world leader in the II,” says Mr. Allen, former director Strategies and Policy at the Center for Joint Artificial Intelligence.
In recent years, the Chinese government has raised AI Talent, offering scholarships and grants on research, as well as encouraging partnerships between universities and industry.
According to Ms, the engineering laboratory for deep training and other state initiatives helped to teach thousands of specialists of the II, Ms. Zhang reports.
And in China there were many bright engineers to recruit.
