
فيديو: مواجهة مفتوحة.. ..حرب النخب.. تشتعل في أميركا وماسك يهدد بتغيير وجه السياسة في واشنطن
Andrei Badalov, vice president of Russia's state-owned oil pipeline company Transneft Dutch intelligence agencies have gathered clear evidence confirming Russia's extensive use of chemical weapons in its ongoing war against Ukraine North Macedonia's President Gordana Siljanovska responded to the upcoming European Parliament (EP) vote on the country's EU progress report US President Donald Trump admitted that his recent phone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin did not yield any progress toward ending the war in Ukraine A state of emergency has been declared in the area surrounding the large wildfire near Ierapetra on the Greek island of Crete A full blockade of several major Serbian cities was launched on the morning of July 4 in protest against police violence
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Leaders
2 days ago
- Leaders
China Calls for New Global AI Body amid Fierce Competition with US
China has called for the establishment of a new organization to promote global cooperation on artificial intelligence (AI), reported Reuters. The move is widely seen as an attempt by China to position itself as an alternative to the US as the two countries feverishly compete for dominance in this pivotal technology. Coordinating Global Efforts During the annual World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China's Premier, Li Qiang, said that Beijing wants to contribute to coordinating international efforts to regulate the fast-evolving AI technology and share the Chinese advances in that critical field. Li added that Beijing advocates for open AI access, promoting equal rights for its use by all nations and businesses. He added that China is ready to share its expertise and products with other countries, especially the Global South – a term that refers to developing, emerging or lower-income countries, mostly in the southern hemisphere. The state-sponsored WAIC conference attracts leading companies, government officials, researchers and investors. This year's edition has seen the participation of more than 800 companies, displaying 3,000 high-tech products, 40 large language models, 50 AI-powered devices and 60 intelligent robots. AI Regulation The Chinese Premier pointed to the challenge of regulating AI's growing risks, which included an insufficient supply of AI chips and restrictions on talent exchange, highlighting the importance of global consensus. 'Overall global AI governance is still fragmented. Countries have great differences particularly in terms of areas such as regulatory concepts, institutional rules,' he said. 'We should strengthen coordination to form a global AI governance framework that has broad consensus as soon as possible,' Li added. Global Governance During the conference, China's Vice Foreign Minister, Ma Zhaoxu, said that Beijing wanted the proposed organization to foster pragmatic cooperation in AI. The organization's headquarters would likely be in Shanghai, Ma told a roundtable of representatives from over 30 countries, including Russia, South Africa, Qatar, South Korea and Germany. Moreover, the Chinese Foreign Ministry unveiled an action plan for global AI governance, calling on governments, international organizations, enterprises and research institutions to collaborate and foster international exchanges including through a cross-border open-source community. US-China Competition The Shanghai conference took place amid a heated technological competition between the US and China, with the AI at the center stage. On Wednesday, the US President, Donald Trump, revealed an AI action plan aimed at loosening restrictions on the development and deployment of artificial intelligence. It aims to expand American AI exports to allies, in an attempt to maintain the American edge over China in this critical technology. Without explicitly mentioning Washington, Li appeared to refer to the US' efforts to hamper China's advances in AI, warning that the technology risked becoming the 'exclusive game' of a few countries and companies. The US has banned advanced technology exports to China, including the most high-end AI chips made by companies such as Nvidia, and chipmaking equipment, citing concerns that the technology could boost China's military capabilities. However, these measures failed to curb China's advancements as Beijing has continued making AI breakthroughs. AI Race As the AI is poised to be the most transformative technology of the 21st century, it has become the key battleground in the technological competition between Washington and Beijing. Although the US is still dominating in the production of top AI models, China is closing the gap, according to Stanford's 2025 AI Index Report, issued in April. While the US leads in AI models quantity, China has rapidly shrunk the quality gap to near parity across major benchmarks in 2024. Furthermore, Beijing maintains its leadership in AI publications and patents, the report noted. 'The race is tighter than ever, and no one has a clear lead,' the Stanford report authors concluded. Short link : Post Views: 152


Al Arabiya
3 days ago
- Al Arabiya
US faces $2 bln, year-long effort to replenish missile interceptors used to defend Israel
The US military will need more than a year to replenish the missile interceptors it deployed last month to help Israel defend against Iranian ballistic missile attacks, according to a new report. The cost to develop new interceptors for the two Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) batteries could approach $2 billion, The Wall Street Journal reported Friday, citing US officials and defense analysts. US officials said over 150 missiles were launched in response to Iranian attacks. 'That is nearly a quarter of the interceptors ever purchased by the Pentagon,' according to the Journal. Other types of interceptors were also deployed to protect Israel, including 80 SM-3s. Over the past two years, the US military has also expended a substantial number of munitions countering Houthi attacks in the Red Sea. That campaign continued until the Trump administration launched an offensive operation targeting Houthi leadership and weapons infrastructure in Yemen. The effort consumed large quantities of US interceptor missiles, including SM-2, SM-3, and SM-6 variants. Estimates for each cost are as follows: $2.1 million for an SM-2, $3.9 million for an SM-6 and $9.7 million for each SM-3 Block IB or $28 million for SM-3 Block IIA. While Israel has its own multi-layered air defense system, supported in large part by the US, it was running low on interceptors, US officials told WSJ. And one US official reportedly said that if Iran had decided to continue lobbing missiles, drones and rockets at Israel, the latter could easily have burned through its Arrow 3 munitions. Israel uses the Arrow 2 and Arrow 3 systems for intercepting medium- and long-range ballistic missiles, as well as David's Sling and Iron Dome for short-range rockets and projectiles. Separately, the US successfully defeated the 'largest single Patriot engagement in US military history' when Iran retaliated for the US strikes on Iran's nuclear sites on the night of June 21 and lobbed a barrage of short-range and medium-range ballistic missiles at Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. In its strikes on Iran, the US dropped a total of 14 GBU-57 Massive Ordnance Penetrators (MOPs), which are 30,000-pound bunker-buster bombs, and a US guided-missile submarine launched over two dozen Tomahawk land-attack cruise missiles.


Asharq Al-Awsat
7 days ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Microsoft Halts China-based Tech Support for Pentagon Systems
Microsoft said Friday it is making sure that personnel based in China are not providing technical support for US Defense Department systems, after investigative news site ProPublica revealed the practice earlier this week. Pentagon chief Pete Hegseth confirmed that work on Defense Department cloud services had been outsourced to people in China, insisting that the country will not have "any involvement whatsoever" with the department's systems going forward. "Microsoft has made changes to our support for US Government customers to assure that no China-based engineering teams are providing technical assistance for DoD Government cloud and related services," the company's chief communications officer, Frank Shaw, said in a post on X. ProPublica reported Tuesday that the tech giant was using engineers based in China -- Washington's primary military rival -- to maintain Pentagon computer systems, with only limited supervision by US personnel who often lacked the necessary expertise to do the job effectively. US Senator Tom Cotton asked Hegseth to look into the matter in a letter dated Thursday, and the Pentagon chief responded that he would do so. Hegseth then posted a video on X Friday evening in which he said "it turns out that some tech companies have been using cheap Chinese labor to assist with DoD cloud services. This is obviously unacceptable, especially in today's digital threat environment." "At my direction, the department will... initiate -- as fast as we can -- a two-week review, or faster, to make sure that what we uncovered isn't happening anywhere else across the DoD," AFP quoted him as saying. "We will continue to monitor and counter all threats to our military infrastructure and online networks," he added, thanking "all those Americans out there in the media and elsewhere who raised this issue to our attention so we could address it."