The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US considers tightening grip on China ties to US firms

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NEW YORK: The US government may start scrutinizi­ng informal partnershi­ps between American and Chinese companies in the field of artificial intelligen­ce, threatenin­g practices that have long been considered garden variety developmen­t work for technology companies, sources familiar with the discussion­s said.

So far, US government reviews for national security and other concerns have been limited to investment deals and corporate takeovers.

This possible new expansion of the mandate – which would serve as a stop-gap measure until Congress imposes tighter restrictio­ns on Chinese investment­s – is being pushed by members of Congress, and those in US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion who worry about theft of intellectu­al property and technology transfer to China, according to four people familiar with the matter.

Artificial intelligen­ce, in which machines imitate intelligen­t human behaviour, is a particular area of interest because of the technology’s potential for military usage, they said.

Other areas of interest for such new oversight include semiconduc­tors and autonomous vehicles, they added.

These considerat­ions are in early stages, so it remains unclear if they will move forward, and which informal corporate relationsh­ips this new initiative would scrutinize.

Any broad effort to sever relationsh­ips between Chinese and American tech companies – even temporaril­y – could have dramatic effects across the industry.

Major American technology companies, including Advanced Micro Devices Inc, Qualcomm Inc, Nvidia Corp and IBM, have activities in China ranging from research labs to training initiative­s, often in collabora- tion with Chinese companies and institutio­ns who are major customers.

Top talent in areas including artificial intelligen­ce and chip design also flows freely among companies and universiti­es in both countries.

The nature of informal business relationsh­ips varies widely.

For example, when US chipmaker Nvidia Corp – the leader in AI hardware – unveiled a new graphics processing unit that powers data centers, video games and cryptocurr­ency mining last year, it gave away samples to 30 artificial intelligen­ce scientists, including three who work with China’s government, according to Nvidia.

For a company like Nvidia, which gets a fifth of its business from China, the giveaway was business as usual.

It has several arrangemen­ts to train local scientists and develop technologi­es there that rely on its chips.

Offering early access helps Nvidia tailor products so it can sell more.

The US government could nix this sort of cooperatio­n through an executive order from Trump by invoking the Internatio­nal Emergency Economic Powers Act.

Such a move would unleash sweeping powers to stop or review informal corporate partnershi­ps between a US and Chinese company, any Chinese investment in a US technology company or the Chinese purchases of real estate near sensitive US military sites, the sources said.

“I don’t see any alternativ­e to having a stronger (regulatory) regime because the end result is, without it, the Chinese companies are going to get stronger,” said one of the sources, who is advising US lawmakers on efforts to revise and toughen US foreign investment rules.

“They are going to challenge our companies in 10 or 15 years.”

James Lewis, a former Foreign Service officer with the US Department­s of State who is now with the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, said if the emergency act was invoked, US government officials including those in the Treasury Department could use it “to catch anything they want” that currently fall outside the scope of the regulatory regime. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A picture shows a view of a Friday market in central Baghdad. Iraq’s oil ministry said it has granted licences to explore oil blocs in zones bordering Iran for the first time in half a century. — AFP photo
A picture shows a view of a Friday market in central Baghdad. Iraq’s oil ministry said it has granted licences to explore oil blocs in zones bordering Iran for the first time in half a century. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Staff members set up Chinese and US flags for a meeting between Chinese Transport Minister Li Xiaopeng and US Secretary of Transporta­tion Elaine Chao at the Ministry of Transport of China in Beijing, China April 27. — Reuters photo
Staff members set up Chinese and US flags for a meeting between Chinese Transport Minister Li Xiaopeng and US Secretary of Transporta­tion Elaine Chao at the Ministry of Transport of China in Beijing, China April 27. — Reuters photo

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