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South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Cadence to plead guilty, pay US$140 million to US for sales to Chinese military university
Cadence Design agreed to plead guilty and pay more than US$140 million to resolve US charges for selling its chip design products to a Chinese military university believed to be involved in simulating nuclear explosions, the US Justice Department said on Monday. Cadence is accused of violating export controls by illegally selling chip design software and hardware to front companies representing China's National University of Defence Technology (NUDT). NUDT's supercomputers are thought to support nuclear explosive simulation and military simulation activities, according to US Commerce Department notices restricting shipments to the university. San Jose, California-based Cadence noted a charge related to the legal proceedings in its quarterly results, also released on Monday. In a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said it was 'pleased' to reach settlements with the justice and commerce departments. Cadence shares rose 6.5 per cent after it posted the news and its quarterly results. The National University of Defence Technology in Changsha, China's central Hunan province. Photo: Wikipedia The deal, which comes as the US and China meet for new trade talks, shows the US is still willing to enforce export controls on China, even as it relaxes some of the restrictions as part of negotiations.


South China Morning Post
3 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
US cuts leave North Koreans reliant on state propaganda
With the flick of a switch in Washington, a lifeline of independent news into North Korea has gone dark, prompting warnings that it will leave the country's 26 million people more isolated than ever. The abrupt halt to funding, passed by the US Senate earlier this month , ends long-standing American support for cross-border broadcasts and clandestine media channels that provided North Koreans with one of the few opportunities to access information unfiltered by state propaganda. Among the most prominent casualties are Voice of America and Radio Free Asia, US-funded broadcasters that have for decades delivered Korean-language news, human rights reporting and glimpses of life beyond North Korea's borders. 'In the long term, we risk knowing less about the human rights situation in North Korea, as less and less information will be coming out of the country,' said Teppei Kasai, Asia programme officer at Human Rights Watch Japan. 'The international community, including Japan, will then naturally have to rely on official statements by the North Korean government, which don't carry a lot of credibility.' The Voice of America headquarters near the US Capitol in Washington on March 17. Photo: EPA-EFE


South China Morning Post
4 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China champions ‘inclusive AI' framework to win the hearts and minds of developing world
Advertisement In his keynote speech on Saturday at the opening of the three-day World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai , Li proposed the establishment of an international organisation to form a global governance framework for AI, unifying nations' different regulatory approaches to the technology. Li also put forward Beijing's support for the open-source development trend in AI, while upholding freer exchanges of research and talent in this fast-growing industry. Still, China's advocacy for inclusiveness, equality and joint governance in AI is likely to face scrutiny in the West – particularly in the US, which promotes a different set of values and approach to AI governance. The White House's new AI Action Plan leaves the core of American policy towards China unchanged, despite US President Donald Trump 's recent concessions and shifts in rhetoric. Advertisement