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Top 7 china, china News Today

#1
Is Antarctica a time bomb for Trump?
#1 out of 7
world1d ago

Is Antarctica a time bomb for Trump?

  • Antarctica is increasingly in focus as the US withdraws influence, allowing rivals to expand presence.
  • Rapid ice melt in Antarctica raises urgency for climate research and understanding
  • Russia and China are expanding their presence on the continent amid geopolitical shifts
  • Sky News' Tom Clarke discusses Antarctica's climate changes and implications for policy
  • Researchers warn that melting ice increases urgency for international cooperation
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#2
Analyzing Washington's new AI accelerator export rules — smaller manufacturers suffer while Nvidia and AMD will reap the rewards
#2 out of 7562.0 est. views

Analyzing Washington's new AI accelerator export rules — smaller manufacturers suffer while Nvidia and AMD will reap the rewards

  • The U.S. DoC issued new export controls that allow limited AI accelerator exports to China under strict licensing.
  • Exports are allowed only if U.S. demand is fully met and shipments to China don’t exceed U.S. shipments to American entities.
  • Third-party testing by a U.S.-based lab is mandatory for every shipment.
  • KYC and end-use disclosures must be provided if hardware is used in IaaS environments.
  • Smaller chipmakers face higher costs and longer waits under the new regime.
  • The policy aims to preserve U.S. leadership while allowing some access to restricted capabilities.
  • The rules apply differently outside China, treating Europe and other markets normally.
  • Nvidia and AMD stand to benefit from these export rules in select cases.
  • Export licenses require compliance with performance and bandwidth thresholds.
  • The changes include a requirement for Know Your Customer procedures and end-use controls.
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#3
Global Survey Finds Much of World See China on the Rise
#3 out of 710.1K est. views
world13h ago

Global Survey Finds Much of World See China on the Rise

  • A global survey of about 26,000 people across 21 countries finds most expect China to gain more global influence in the coming decade.
  • South Africa, Brazil and Turkey lead in believing China will have greater global influence, with 83%, 72% and 63% respectively.
  • In the United States, 54% share the view that China will increase its influence, with similar averages across the 10 EU countries surveyed.
  • The report notes that many non-Western publics view China as a legitimate global partner rather than a zero-sum rival.
  • The survey occurred in November 2025, before the U.S. action in Venezuela and amid shifting U.S. and European views of China.
  • The report highlights a multipolar world where non-Western countries gain voice in international relations.
  • Respondents in several regions see China rising in technology, manufacturing and energy leadership within a decade.
  • Some publics still view the U.S. as an ally or necessary partner, though support varies by country.
  • Some EU states see the U.S. as a rival or adversary, signaling shifting transatlantic perceptions.
  • The report ties shifts in views to Trump-era policy and broader strategic competition, with cautions about a bipolar world.
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#4
China has stopped buying power from Russia
#4 out of 7137.6K est. views
world11h ago

China has stopped buying power from Russia

  • China has stopped electricity imports from Russia as of January 1, 2026, ending a long‑running cross-border supply.
  • The halt is driven by elevated export prices in 2026 that surpassed China's domestic rates.
  • Russia’s Inter RAO had supplied surplus electricity under a 2012 contract with China’s State Grid Corporation.
  • The contract with State Grid Corporation runs until 2037 and envisioned substantial deliveries.
  • Russia’s Energy Ministry has not ruled out export resumption if China submits a new request.
  • China–Russia trade declined in 2025 after a record in 2024, marking the first drop in five years.
  • The report frames the move within broader energy and price dynamics between the two countries.
  • The article emphasizes the potential for future resumption if new terms emerge.
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#5
Why Everyone Is Suddenly in a ‘Very Chinese Time’ in Their Lives
#5 out of 715.2K est. views

Why Everyone Is Suddenly in a ‘Very Chinese Time’ in Their Lives

  • A WIRED analysis examines the viral 'Made in China' trend and its cultural implications across social media.
  • The trend is called Made in China or Chinamaxxing, with debates on admiration versus cultural appropriation.
  • The piece notes China’s ongoing dominance in manufacturing and tech shapes global perceptions.
  • Observers warn that memes may obscure complex realities of Chinese society and policy.
  • The article emphasizes that trends are transient, yet they reflect broader shifts in identity and global production.
  • The piece is part of WIRED’s Made in China newsletter, featuring perspectives from researchers and writers.
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#6
NASA's Mars Sample Return is dead, leaving China to retrieve signs of life from the Red Planet
#6 out of 7
science6h ago

NASA's Mars Sample Return is dead, leaving China to retrieve signs of life from the Red Planet

  • The Senate-approved funding bill effectively cancels NASA's Mars Sample Return program, delaying or halting its planned Earth return of Martian rocks.
  • The bill preserves some MSR-related tech funding, allocating $110 million to the Mars Future Missions program.
  • China’s Tianwen-3 sample return mission aims to collect Martian rocks in 2028 and return them by 2031, presenting a rival timeline.
  • The package also notes that the Mars program remains linked to broader NASA science funding and Moon-to-Mars ambitions.
  • The spending bill may still give NASA room to revive MSR in the future through technology investments and continued research.
  • Supporters, including The Planetary Society, view the bill as preserving technology that could aid future missions.
  • The broader funding totals show only a modest cut to NASA science compared with more drastic proposals.
  • The article frames the MSR cancellation as a potential strategic shift, with China possibly taking the lead in Mars sample retrieval.
  • NASA’s decision reflects the high cost and delays associated with MSR despite its potential scientific payoff.
  • Overall, the bill keeps NASA science funding stable while steering MSR-related work into a more limited, tech-focused path.
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#7
The AI hype era might be over, now, companies want real returns
#7 out of 7

The AI hype era might be over, now, companies want real returns

  • Capgemini reports 60% of firms have started exploring agentic AI use cases for greater autonomy.
  • China leads with nearly half of firms piloting or deploying AI agents, followed by the US and Europe.
  • Only 41% of CEOs, CFOs, and COOs have above-average trust in AI for decisions.
  • AI spend is expected to rise to 5% of annual budgets in 2026, driven by infrastructure, data foundations, governance, and upskilling.
  • Capgemini notes a pragmatic era of AI transformation focused on revenue, risk, and decision-making.
  • Executives expect AI-driven decisions to require human oversight despite rising automation.
  • Capgemini cites regulatory and security concerns as ongoing barriers to AI adoption.
  • By 2026, investments will also target workforce upskilling and governance.
  • Generative AI adoption remains steady at 38% of firms.
  • The study links AI adoption to broader business outcomes beyond cost savings.
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