Chinese artificial intelligence can withstand the trade war

In light of the world’s involvement with the titles of successive news about customs duties coming from Washington, a stream of artificial intelligence ads from China was absent. Alibaba Group Holding introduced a new open -source model to generate videos, while Zhipu AI, known as the title of ‘Little Dragon’, launched provisional public subscription documents for this year, and the Deepseek application has spread from hospitals to local governments, the list is long. Deep SIC inflamed global enthusiasm of the impossible to estimate the local enthusiasm as the deeply sick system, which caused a global sensation earlier this year and proved the ability of China to compete directly with Silicon Valley. This initial business, based in Hangzhou, has revived the artificial intelligence sector in the country. Despite the unrest raised by the trade war launched by US President Donald Trump in the world markets, these challenges will not discourage China from the course in the development of artificial intelligence technology. The credit for this steadfastness amid customs duties is not only due to the local focus, but also to the broad government support that this sector enjoys. In February, Chinese President Xi Jinping held a rare meeting with a number of senior managers in the technological sector, including the founder of “Ali Baba” Jack Ma and the founder of “Deep Sick” Liang Winfing, in a clear indication of the support of the highest power pyramid. In March, the National People’s Congress policy report included nine times regular references to artificial intelligence, emphasizing that China is developing a system of Open Source models. Meanwhile, Bloomberg Intelligence said the government has allocated an investment fund for artificial intelligence worth 60 billion yuan ($ 8.2 billion) to support this sector in the light of the market fluctuations. The West should not underestimate what can happen if Beijing is completely destroyed to become a world leader in the field of artificial intelligence. The confidence of the Chinese makes a technical difference, but it is not limited to supporting government policy. There is another source of strength represented in the wide acceptance of technology among the country’s population of 1.4 billion. The world’s most enthusiastic Chinese deal with the potential of artificial intelligence. In a poll conducted by IPSOs, about 83% of adults in China have shown that artificial intelligence products and services have more benefits than negative, which are the highest worldwide, compared to only 39% of Americans. China also has the percentage of participants who confirmed that artificial intelligence has changed radically over the past three years, and expected this effect to continue during the next period. A number of Chinese adults, three times more than their American peers, believe that artificial intelligence will play a positive role in improving the economy. The widespread distribution of this enthusiasm exceeds the corridors of technology companies. For example, Chinese farmers in Hobby, despite the limited education of many of them, have begun to rely on artificial intelligence techniques to experience heavy rain this year. While the United States is accurately focused on developing advanced models of artificial intelligence, China moves quickly to the spread of artificial intelligence instruments on a large scale. This collective distribution gives it a competitive advantage. There is no doubt that the continuation of the trade war will harm the export -based China economy, and that it will also harm its technological sector, which has already been reflected in market fluctuations. But it is wrong to confuse the pain of the macro economic and the slowdown in the larger technical aspirations of Beijing. Just as the prominent researcher specializing in Chinese affairs, Geardo Diebibo of the Rand Foundation, wrote, “Even though economic growth continues relatively poor and the suffering of many Chinese businesses continues, the central and local governments in China will continue to support advanced technological industries and emerging businesses such as Deep Seck.” Only a few days after Trump set fire to the current trade war, Stanford University issued a report stating that China is the top of the world in artificial intelligence and patent publications. Although the United States retains its superiority in developing the most advanced models, “China works to reduce the void in performance.” The chips are a challenge for artificial intelligence. Access to advanced electronic chips. US restrictions were a major obstacle to providing the necessary computer ability to pay Beijing’s technical ambitions. The ambiguity with Washington intensified the restrictions on the “H20” chips produced by the “Nvidia” business, specifically designed to bypass the export controls. But according to the analysis of “Intelligence Bloomberg”, this narrowing can in the long run have a positive impact on the sector, rather than its disability. Analysts have written that this procedure can reduce ‘excess models’, and that technology giants, including ‘Ali Baby’, ‘Teceneolgies’ and ‘Huawei Technologies’, have already enjoyed enough chips to alleviate the impact of these measures. On the opposite bank of the Pacific, the fear will increase that the disorders due to customs duties will undermine the dominance of the Silicon Valley in the field of artificial intelligence. Although policy makers and business leaders are running the effects of the multi -leading trade war, there will be no justification if China will be surprised by a new penetration similar to “Deep Seck”.