What's new

Why China could win the tech cold war

beijingwalker

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 4, 2011
Messages
65,195
Reaction score
-55
Country
China
Location
China
Why China could win the tech cold war
Anjani Trivedi
May 2, 2019 — 6.21am

China's growing technological prowess in areas such as artificial intelligence is making Washington nervous. US efforts to fight back, though, could make the problem worse.

In US policy circles, suspicion of China is starting to resemble a new Red Scare. Universities are heightening scrutiny of research proposals from China and, in some cases, restricting collaboration. Chinese scientists' visas are being delayed for conferences and exchanges. Visas for Chinese graduate students studying topics such as robotics or advanced manufacturing have been shortened to one year from five.

Last week, the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston kicked out three senior researchers of Chinese ethnicity after the US National Institutes of Health said they had potentially violated disclosure and confidentiality rules. Workers at various technology companies have been charged with stealing trade secrets in recent months.

More formal rules are coming. After President Donald Trump signed the Export Control Reform Act last year, the US put in place new policies to restrict Chinese investment in American high-tech companies. It also began a process of reexamining export controls on sensitive "emerging and foundational" technologies. That process is nearly complete: The Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security is holding seminars over the next few months to help companies understand how to comply with the tighter restrictions.

While the details are still murky, one thing is clear about the new rules: Like the old ones, they'll apply not just to hardware shipped overseas, or even software and algorithms. They will cover individuals and ideas as well.

The disclosure of proprietary information or controlled information to a foreign national, even within the US, triggers the need for an export review process. If such an exchange were to happen elsewhere in the world - between a US national and a foreign national - it would be considered an export to that country.

Among other things, this means that US tech companies may not be able to use Chinese researchers to work on certain critical technologies, including AI. The kind of intellectual collaboration that's produced some of the greatest advances in the field may no longer be possible.

This could be a boon for China. Beijing for years has tried to lure talent to the mainland. It's set up generous benefits for so-called sea turtles - Chinese nationals who have "swum" abroad to study and work and then returned - from cheap housing to lucrative research grants. Those efforts have had mixed success: Fears of censorship and red tape have dissuaded some; a desire to live and work with the best minds in the world has motivated others to stay on in the US

If new export controls are enforced in their harshest form, the calculus for many Chinese scientists and engineers may change. Their job possibilities in the US will be limited. A potentially cumbersome visa process could discourage many American companies and universities from even interviewing qualified Chinese candidates.

For those who do find work, living under constant suspicion will be far from pleasant. In a letter to Science magazine last month, associations representing Chinese-American scientists said even they fear being singled out and racially profiled.

Some Chinese researchers may seek opportunities in Europe instead, or in countries such as Israel or India with thriving high-tech industries. Many more are likely to go home.

This would drain the US of some of its best talent; institutions such as the Massachusetts Institute of Technology rely on foreign students and academics for a significant part of their research capability. It'll also limit the ability and willingness of US companies and universities to learn from Chinese counterparts: The Commerce Department's latest "unverified list" - essentially a red flag that requires US companies to do more diligence and provide additional information about a listed company or person, while imposing license requirements - includes mostly Chinese academic institutions, research centers and tech companies.

More conversations will begin taking place outside the US In its global strategy report, MIT noted that "America's relative economic weight in the world has been declining for decades, and as other countries grow more prosperous, a growing share of global R&D is originating outside the US" Collaborations between Chinese and European researchers will no doubt increase; Washington's inability to persuade its allies to reject technology from Huawei Technologies has shown the limits of its influence.

When it comes to certain sectors, including artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles, an influx of new talent now could spur major advances in China. The country already offers some key advantages for researchers - including the reams of data available and fewer privacy concerns. Smart researchers could leverage those tools to leapfrog US technology.

Export controls covering technical information have been around since at least the 1940s. In the 1980s, the Reagan administration also erected barriers to scientific collaboration, fearing Soviet efforts to steal US technology. Universities were pressured to close their doors to foreigners, among other isolationist measures.

Such restrictions ultimately failed to slow the transfer of ideas and technologies. If anything, they blinded the US to its rivals' growing capabilities. Washington might want to study that history, along with where technology is headed, before isolating itself again.

https://www.afr.com/news/world/asia/why-china-could-win-the-tech-cold-war-20190430-p51ikp
 
.
Why China could win the tech cold war
Answer: Simple. China has more scientists and engineers that the entire u.s. population combined. And we haven't even BEGUN to talk about the industrial base and cost of living yet!
 
.
Answer: Simple. China has more scientists and engineers that the entire u.s. population combined. And we haven't even BEGUN to talk about the industrial base and cost of living yet!
Restricting ethnic Chinese in participation in US high tech research and development is shoot US itself in the foot, any playing right in the hands of the Chinese government.
 
.
I like these draconian measures draining the US off foreign talents!
 
.
I wonder what will the result of the tech race between USA and China ten years from now...
 
.
Answer: Simple. China has more scientists and engineers that the entire u.s. population combined. And we haven't even BEGUN to talk about the industrial base and cost of living yet!

USA gets people from China, India, Middle East, Europe and Latin America to reinforce home grown talent
 
.
USA gets people from China, India, Middle East, Europe and Latin America to reinforce home grown talent
You do know that out of every 100 immigrants to the united states, 90 will get into nonscientific and nonengineering related fields, right?
 
.
I heard the news about China having worlds fastest coumpter.A quantum kind I dont know what it means but definitely heard about it.
 
. .
You do know that out of every 100 immigrants to the united states, 90 will get into nonscientific and nonengineering related fields, right?

that is true. we are talking about the remaining 10
 
.
USA gets people from China, India, Middle East, Europe and Latin America to reinforce home grown talent
Still the gap is closing fast, it's all about enough funds, What US can provide now is more funds and talents go after more money, there are many new world coountries whose population is consisted of people from all over the world, most those new world countries are pretty backward in both economy and science and technology, so , once US loses it economic might, everything else will go with it.
 
.
Aahh...Another writer on a deadline saved her weekend with a useless 'could' article. :rolleyes:
 
.
Back
Top Bottom