Tensions Flare in US-China Tech Tango: Hacks, Bans & Billions on the Line - podcast episode cover

Tensions Flare in US-China Tech Tango: Hacks, Bans & Billions on the Line

Jul 03, 20254 min
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Episode description

This is your Beijing Bytes: US-China Tech War Updates podcast.

Hello Byteheads! Ting here, your snarky sidekick and circuit-board whisperer, dialing in from Beijing on July 3rd, 2025. Buckle up—because the US-China tech war has cranked up to quantum speed these past two weeks, and whether you’re a code warrior or just worried about your smartphone, you’ll want all the details.

Leading the headlines: cybersecurity chills. Last week, reports surfaced of a major breach in a US cloud provider, suspected to be the handiwork of a group with links to Chinese state-backed actors. The company hasn’t named names—classic PR move—but the breach has put federal agencies and Silicon Valley on edge. Not to be outdone, Chinese authorities revealed a counter-hack that exposed a trove of tools allegedly used by American cyber-offensive teams. Both sides are flexing, and trust me, the cyberspace trenches have never been deeper.

Now, on to tech restrictions. Washington just doubled down, expanding the Entity List to cover three more Chinese AI firms—DeepSeek, among them. If you haven’t heard, DeepSeek unleashed an open-source AI model last week, matching US heavyweights at a fraction of the cost. That sent tech investors into a minor panic, with Nvidia’s shares zigzagging like a roller coaster. Rumors are swirling that the US may tighten curbs on Nvidia’s H20 chips, but nothing official yet. Nvidia execs are pretending not to sweat—I’m not buying it.

Meanwhile, Beijing is playing its own game of chess. Hot off the press: a refreshed Catalogue of Prohibited Tech Exports, with new bans on shipping advanced LiDAR and photovoltaic silicon wafer tech out of China. This comes in lockstep with stricter export controls on rare earth refining—the minerals that make everything from EVs to stealth fighters possible. With China still holding roughly 85% of global rare earth processing, the US is anxiously tallying up its stockpiles.

Policy shifts are happening at government warp speed. The US is prioritizing tech sovereignty over old-school trade deficits—tariffs are out, national security is in. The Biden administration is accelerating its $50 billion CHIPS Act rollout, while China’s $143 billion drive for semiconductor self-sufficiency is moving from PowerPoint to factory floor. Both sides are pouring billions into their homegrown champions and slashing knowledge transfer: university labs that once teamed up are now keeping each other at arm’s length.

The industry impact? Supply chains are scrambling to adapt. Taiwanese fab TSMC is hedging its bets with new plants from Phoenix to Kumamoto, while Huawei—still blacklisted in the West—is leaning hard into open-source and domestic alternatives. The global economy? Fragmenting faster than my old ThinkPad after a coffee spill. Everyone from Europe to Southeast Asia is being forced to pick sides or risk being left behind.

So, where are we headed? Experts warn that the race for dominance in AI and chip tech will only intensify, driving up R&D budgets and splitting the world into US- and China-centric tech blocs. Some whisper of a new digital Cold War; others see a world of parallel innovation.

My bet? Watch out for stealthy pivots from both sides. In tech, the only constant is surprise—and maybe a zero-day exploit or two! Stay tuned, stay patched, and I’ll see you in the next update. This is Ting, signing off from Beijing Bytes.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Hello, bite heads, ting here, your snarky sidekick and circuit board whisperer, dialing in from Beijing on July third, twenty twenty five. Buckle up because the US China tech war has cranked up to quantum speed these past two weeks, and whether you're a code warrior or just worried about your smartphone, you'll want all the details leading the headlines

cybersecurity chills. Last week, reports surfaced of a major breach in a US cloud provider, suspected to be the handiwork of a group with links to Chinese state backed actors. The company hasn't named names classic pr move, but the breach has put federal agencies and Silicon Valley on edge. Not to be outdone, Chinese authorities revealed a counter hack that exposed a trove of tools allegedly used by American cyber offensive teams. Both sides are flexing, and trust me,

the cyber space trenches have never been deeper. Now onto tech restrictions, Washington just doubled down, expanding the entity list to cover three more Chinese AI firms, deep Seek among them. If you haven't heard, deep Seek unleashed an open source AI model last week, matching US heavyweights at a fraction of the cost that sent tech investors into a minor panic.

Within Vidia's shares zigzagging like a roller coaster. Rumors are swirling that the US may tighten curbs on Nvidia's H twenty chips, but nothing official yet, and Nvidia execs are pretending not to sweat. I'm not buying it. Meanwhile, Beijing is playing its own game of chess hot off the press a refreshed catalog of prohibited tech exports, with new bands on shipping advanced lidar and photovoltaic silicon wafer tech

out of China. This comes in lockstep with stricter export controls on rare earth refining, the minerals that make everything from evs to stealth fighters possible. With China still holding roughly eighty five percent of global rare earth processing, the US is anxiously tallying up its stockpiles. Policy shifts are

happening at government works orp speed. The US is prioritizing tech sovereignty over old school trade deficits tariffs are out, national security is in the Biden administration is accelerating its fifty billion dollar Chips Act rollout, while China's one hundred and forty three billion dollars drive for semiconductor self sufficiency is moving from PowerPoint to factory floor. Both sides are pouring billions into their homegrown champions and slashing knowledge transfer.

University labs that once teamed up are now keeping each other at arm's length. The industry impact supply chains are scrambling to adapt Taiwanese fab TSMC is hedging its bets with new plants from Phoenix to Kumamoto, while Huawei, still blacklisted in the West, is leaning hard into open source and domestic alternatives. The global economy fragmenting faster than my old think pad after a coffee spill. Everyone from Europe to Southeast Asia is being forced to pick sides or

risk being left behind. So where are we headed? Experts warn that the race for dominance in AI and chip tech will only intensify, driving up R and D budgets and splitting the world into US and China centric tech blocks. Some whisper of a new digital Cold war. Others see a world of parallel innovation. My bet watch out for stealthy pivots from both sides in tech. The only constant is surprise and maybe a zero day exploit or two. Stay tuned, stay patched, and I'll see you in the

next update. This is Ting signing off from Beijing bites. Thanks for listening. Make sure you hit the subscribe button and never miss an update. This has been a quiet please production. For more check out Quiet Please dot ai

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