President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he wants Ukraine to supply rare earth to the US in exchange for continued military aid.
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On Friday, Beijing announced that a trade-in program that previously applied to big appliances and cars will now be widened to smartphones.
Despite China’s overall economy coming down with a bad cold last year, its EV players are upstaging the world’s most valuable auto company.
With military conflict continuing across the globe, and the world’s superpowers locked in a stare-down, it’s not easy being a global business
“You have to be tracking open source as an option.”
If similar cases are a guide, the US has given equal weight to both known and hypothetical threats to national security.
ByteDance, the China-based TikTok owner and political punching bag, is emerging as the nation’s answer to OpenAI.
Call the considerations, which could have knock-off effects on global currency markets, a yuan-sided argument.
The startup promises to fill a void in one area where US military research and development has been caught flat-footed.
A federal appeals court upheld the “TikTok Ban” that would force China-based ByteDance to sell its app next month or face exile from the US.
Beijing’s move came swiftly in response to the White House’s decision to slap new curbs on exports of vital chip components to China.
Trump promised in a Truth post to levy via 25% tariffs “on ALL products coming into the United States” from Mexico and Canada.
To be clear, OpenAI has not yet come down hard saying DeepSeek definitely stole its intellectual property.
The world’s factory is slowing down and it might have nothing to do with the tariffs promised by the Trump 2.0 administration.