logo
China Calls for Global AI Rules as U.S. Escalates Tech Fight – What Investors Should Watch

China Calls for Global AI Rules as U.S. Escalates Tech Fight – What Investors Should Watch

China is proposing to lead the creation of a new international body to shape the future of artificial intelligence. Speaking at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, Premier Li Qiang called for a World AI Cooperation Organization, aiming to make AI development more inclusive and to prevent it from being dominated by a handful of nations or companies.
Elevate Your Investing Strategy:
Take advantage of TipRanks Premium at 50% off! Unlock powerful investing tools, advanced data, and expert analyst insights to help you invest with confidence.
The proposal comes as the global AI race accelerates. Premier Li cited the need for shared governance to address the risks tied to AI, from job losses to security concerns. Former Google (GOOG) chief executive Eric Schmidt backed the idea of global collaboration, saying the U.S. and China should work together to maintain stability and ensure human control over powerful AI systems.
Tensions Rise as China Courts Allies and the U.S. Doubles Down
However, turning that vision into a working framework will not be easy, as the U.S. is taking a different path. Just days before the conference, President Donald Trump signed new executive orders to ease regulations and boost energy access for AI infrastructure, including data centers. These moves are designed to strengthen companies like OpenAI and Google while reinforcing America's lead in advanced AI.
In the meantime, geopolitical friction remains high. U.S. restrictions on Nvidia Corporation (NVDA) chips continue to limit China's access to high-end semiconductors. Premier Li acknowledged these supply chain issues and reaffirmed China's goal to reduce its reliance on foreign technology. That includes support for homegrown companies like DeepSeek, which has gained attention for scaling up open-sourced models and AI agents.
China's strategy also includes outreach to the Global South, including partnerships with Brazil and African nations. However, international trust remains a hurdle. Western companies and governments are hesitant to align with a governance model led by Beijing, especially regarding concerns around data access, intellectual property, and dual-use technologies.
Takeaway for Investors
For investors, the gap between cooperation and competition is clear. Chinese firms are racing to set their own benchmarks, while U.S. players double down on domestic infrastructure and AI regulation. The idea of a global AI framework may gain traction diplomatically, but market dynamics suggest a more fragmented path forward.
Whether this initiative reshapes AI development or becomes another diplomatic flashpoint will depend on how governments and companies balance access, risk, and control in the months ahead.
Using TipRanks' Comparison Tool, we've analyzed several leading AI stocks that could be influenced by geopolitical tensions, shifting regulations, and broader market dynamics.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Boston launches program to support small minority-, women-owned businesses seeking city contracts
Boston launches program to support small minority-, women-owned businesses seeking city contracts

Boston Globe

time33 minutes ago

  • Boston Globe

Boston launches program to support small minority-, women-owned businesses seeking city contracts

The city has historically struggled to give increased to 12 percent, following the implementation of new legislation aimed at supporting those businesses, Wu said. 'We are on track to continue that positive momentum,' she said. 'When businesses like these are working for Boston, it works for all of Boston.' Advertisement Hansy Better Barraza, the co-founder of Latino-owned 'By allowing us access to city-owned contracts, we don't necessarily have to ride the highs and lows,' Barraza said. SCALE provides an avenue for companies to build wealth in the future, Wu said. The city, she said, needs to ensure that local businesses can benefit from upcoming global events, such as the Advertisement While developing the program, Andrea Caruth, the director of supplier diversity at Boston, said her department surveyed people and asked: 'What are the gaps? What are the barriers?' The department found that one of the biggest challenges facing minority- and women-owned businesses was capacity, she said. Entrepreneurs from underrepresented backgrounds have to find time to squeeze in a phone call and spend hours on a laptop — while balancing familial commitments, officials and grantees said. Recipient Shonté Davidson, CEO of Davidson said SCALE will help her business increase its operational capacity. The company currently has a Better Together Brain Trust ha s received $50,000 of the grant money so far. After Davidson completes the six-month program — which requires weekly meetings and classes, she hopes to receive up to another $150,000. 'We're going to use [the money] to scale — pun intended,' Davidson said. Irene Li, CEO of Prepshift, is working with six grantees in the food and dining industry as a consultant in developing their business plans. Restaurants deal with expenses, like tariffs, insurance, ingredients, and labor — all of that adds up, she said. 'Most mom-and-pop and independent restaurants are barely surviving,' Li said. Advertisement After reviewing more than 180 applications, the city chose 27 grantees from a spectrum of industries to receive money through funds from American Rescue Plan Act, totaling up to $6.5 million. Of those applicants, about a third were food and dining businesses, according to Li. 'We have a lot more to do. We've made a great start,' she added. started the business, because as an infant, Bennuamen was diagnosed with acute malnutrition and severe allergies, meaning he couldn't eat eggs, milk, and dairy. 'It was a call to action,' Tonya Johnson said. 'I had to do something as a mother to save him.' The business worked out of a shared kitchen and sold products at farmers markets, hospitals, and colleges — a 'grassroots kind of growth,' Johnson said. Now, the Ancient Bakers is in the middle of a 'pivot,' trying to focus on e-commerce, offering multi-purpose bakery mixes and finished cookies to customers. The business is working on building its online presence, which the grant money will help go toward. '[The grant] is the fuel that is going to help us come back to a marketplace strong,' Johnson said. Jessica Ma can be reached at

GPT-5 Is Coming. Here's What OpenAI Has Said So Far
GPT-5 Is Coming. Here's What OpenAI Has Said So Far

CNET

time33 minutes ago

  • CNET

GPT-5 Is Coming. Here's What OpenAI Has Said So Far

Close followers of OpenAI's model releases are probably tired of hearing about GPT-5, the next big step in the company's line of flagship large language models. It's been expected seemingly all year. But the hints are getting stronger. Already this week, the ChatGPT maker has unveiled its open-weights models -- gpt-oss -- that have also been teased for months. These models, unlike the GPT models and other popular LLMs like Google's Gemini, offer transparency into how they work and think. Just before that release, however, CEO Sam Altman hinted that something bigger was coming too: "something big-but-small today," he posted on X, "and then a big upgrade later this week." (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET's parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.) The work on GPT-5 hasn't been a secret, and the hype has been intense. In a July interview with the podcaster Theo Von, Altman said he was testing the new model and asked it to interpret and write an email he had trouble understanding. "I felt useless relative to the AI in this thing that I felt like I should've been able to do and I couldn't," Altman said. (It must have been a very impressive email.) It's been a long time coming. GPT-4, current generation of the complex program behind ChatGPT and many other tools, came out in March 2023, an eternity ago in the world of large language models. There have been a lot of iterations since: GPT-4.5 rolled out in February of this year. Reasoning models have also emerged in the gap, including o3 and o4 families. GPT-5 was originally expected to happen in the early part of the year, but Altman said in April that it would be delayed a few more months. Developers found it harder than expected to integrate all of the elements they wanted, and Altman said they also wanted to be sure they had the capacity to support "what we expect to be unprecedented demand." Read more: ChatGPT Will Start Asking If You Need a Break. That May Not Be Enough to Snap a Bad Habit On Sunday, he doubled down on the capacity worries, posting on X that "although it may be slightly choppy, we think you'll really love what we've created for you!" OpenAI's rivals haven't been sitting around twiddling their thumbs. Google's Gemini 2.5 models, released in March, incorporate reasoning while also being able to handle huge prompts. Anthropic's Claude 4 models, which debuted in May, include one designed specifically for coding and complicated tasks. But it's ChatGPT that fronts the pack as the most popular default tool for users, and a new version could extend that lead. It also might not be perfect. OpenAI had to pull an update to its GPT-4o model earlier this year because it was way too nice -- like, codependent nice, like it might not push back even if you're asking about something harmful to yourself or others.

Rwanda agrees to take deportees from the US
Rwanda agrees to take deportees from the US

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

Rwanda agrees to take deportees from the US

The State Department said the US 'works with Rwanda on a range of mutual priorities' but wouldn't comment on details of the deportation deal and what it called diplomatic conversations with other governments. Advertisement The US sent 13 men it described as dangerous criminals who were in the US illegally to South Sudan and Eswatini in Africa last month and has said it is seeking more agreements with African nations. It said those deportees' home countries refused to take them back. The US has also deported hundreds of Venezuelans and others to Costa Rica, Panama, and El Salvador under President Donald Trump's plans to expel people who he says entered the US illegally. In March, using an 18th-century wartime law, the US deported more than 200 Venezuelan immigrants to El Salvador, where they were immediately transferred to a mega-prison known as the Terrorism Confinement Center, or CECOT, which was built to hold alleged gang members. Human rights groups have documented hundreds of deaths as well as cases of torture inside its walls. Advertisement Rwanda attracted international attention and some outrage when it struck a deal in 2022 with the UK to accept migrants who had arrived in the UK to seek asylum. Under that proposed deal, their claims would have been processed in Rwanda and, if successful, they would have stayed there. The contentious agreement was criticized by rights groups and others as being unethical and unworkable and was ultimately scrapped when Britain's new Labour government took over. Britain's Supreme Court ruled in 2023 that the deal was unlawful because Rwanda was not a safe third country for migrants. The Trump administration has come under scrutiny for the African countries it has entered into secretive deals with to take deportees. It sent eight men from South Sudan, Cuba, Laos, Mexico, Myanmar, and Vietnam to South Sudan in early July after a US Supreme Court ruling cleared the way for their deportations. They were held for weeks in a converted shipping container at an American military base in Djibouti as the legal battle over their deportations played out. South Sudan, which is tipping toward civil war, has declined to say where the men are being held or what their fate is. The US also deported five men who are citizens of Vietnam, Jamaica, Cuba, Yemen, and Laos to the southern African kingdom of Eswatini, where the government said they will be held in solitary confinement in prison for an undetermined period. A human rights lawyer in Eswatini said the men are being denied access to legal representation there and has taken the authorities to court. Eswatini is Africa's last absolute monarchy, and the king rules over the government, and political parties are effectively banned. Advertisement Both South Sudan and Eswatini have declined to give details of their agreements with the US. Rwanda, a relatively small country of some 15 million people, has long stood out on the continent for its recovery from a genocide that killed over 800,000 people in 1994. It has promoted itself under longtime President Paul Kagame as an example of stability and development, but human rights groups allege there are also deadly crackdowns on any perceived dissent against Kagame, who has been president for 25 years. Government spokesperson Makolo said the agreement with the US was Rwanda doing its part to help with international migration issues because 'our societal values are founded on reintegration and rehabilitation.' 'Those approved [for resettlement in Rwanda] will be provided with workforce training, healthcare, and accommodation support to jumpstart their lives in Rwanda, giving them the opportunity to contribute to one of the fastest-growing economies in the world over the last decade,' she said. There were no details about whether Rwanda had received anything in return for taking the deportees. Gonzaga Muganwa, a Rwandan political analyst, said, 'appeasing President Trump pays.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store