Written by Abishur Prakash
To operate in China, firms like IBM and Goldman Sachs will have to accept a new reality: algorithms are the new face of the Chinese government and they will decide if foreign companies succeed (or fail) in China.
Read MoreWritten by Abishur Prakash
To operate in China, firms like IBM and Goldman Sachs will have to accept a new reality: algorithms are the new face of the Chinese government and they will decide if foreign companies succeed (or fail) in China.
Read MoreWritten by Hessy Elliott
China’s accelerating AI innovation deserves the world’s full attention, but it is unhelpful to reduce all the many developments into a simplistic narrative about China as a threat or a villain.
Read MoreWritten by Abishur Prakash
Could governments start forcing technology companies to program AI with local beliefs, political attitudes and traditions? If so, for the first time, ethics may define business success, especially in Asia.
Read MoreWritten by Shihui Yin
China considers its digital infrastructure in Southeast Asia as a core starting and focal point to export its AI-related technologies, technical standards and to access large pools of data to boost its AI industry.
Read More