Miscellaneous News

proelite

Junior Member
Or China comit to doing nothing, make demands on Trump that he cant meet, and force him to choose between unilaterally backing down, or escalate to the promised 60% tariff that China, Trump and Elon all know will destroy the US economy

China destroyed Stargate 24 hours after it was announced, China retaliated to 10% tariffs with 15% tariff, export control and Google investgation, China isnt playing for giving Trump cookies, China is playing for making him fufill his own promise to destroy America

If Beijing gives something negligible so that Trump has his optics win, they'll do it.

1st round they treated him like an adult and that was a mistake. You should treat him like any serious and busy parent would treat their demanding toddler at a restaurant. Distract them with an iPad. In the case of Trump that's an optics win.
 

siegecrossbow

General
Staff member
Super Moderator
If Beijing gives something negligible do that Trump has his optics win, they'll do it.

1st round they treated him like an adult and that was a mistake. You should treat him like any serious and busy parent would treat their demanding toddler at a restaurant. Distract them with an iPad. In the case of Trump that's an optics win.

Nah you need to spank the heck out of him.
 

supercat

Major
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Talking only? Just wishcasting from WSJ - China is prepared this time, unlike in 2017-2018, and has already started counter-sanction swiftly as some posters mentioned.

Google is suspected of violating the Anti-Monopoly Law, the State Administration for Market Regulation has decided to initiate an investigation in accordance with the law

On February 4, according to the State Administration for Market Regulation, because Google is suspected of violating the Anti-Monopoly Law of the People's Republic of China, the State Administration for Market Regulation has initiated an investigation into Google in accordance with the law.

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Not only Google, China's the anti-trust investigations also cover Nvidia and Intel.

China targets Google, Nvidia and Intel as Trump tariffs bite​

Beijing seeks leverage against US president by reviving investigations into tech giants
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Serb

Junior Member
Registered Member
If Beijing gives something negligible so that Trump has his optics win, they'll do it.

1st round they treated him like an adult and that was a mistake. You should treat him like any serious and busy parent would treat their demanding toddler at a restaurant. Distract them with an iPad. In the case of Trump that's an optics win.
Nah, at this point, as he told you, this is not about optics and economics anymore.

They legit see that the US is about to collapse and preparing to give it the final push.

Or else they wouldn't give such swift, disproportional, and multi-dimensional retaliation.

I think this time Beijing actually hopes that Trump continues the trade war, increases tariffs, etc,

Not stop as during his first time. Beijing is not on the defensive anymore, as you could see in the last few months.

They hope to pile on now even more economic problems on top of all the other imperial crumbling and collapse-level BS Trump has done.
 

coolgod

Colonel
Registered Member
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Iran Is Developing Plans for Faster, Cruder Weapon, U.S. Concludes​

As Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel prepares to meet with President Trump, the question of whether to strike Iran’s facilities or negotiate with Tehran appears certain to be under debate.
New intelligence about Iran’s nuclear program has convinced American officials that a secret team of the country’s scientists is exploring a faster, if cruder, approach to developing an atomic weapon if Tehran’s leadership decides to race for a bomb, according to current and former American officials.
The development comes even amid signals that Iran’s new president is actively seeking a negotiation with the Trump administration.
The intelligence was collected in the last months of the Biden administration, then relayed to President Trump’s national security team during the transition of power, according to the officials, who asked for anonymity to discuss sensitive details. The intelligence assessment warned that Iranian weapons engineers and scientists were essentially looking for a shortcut that would enable them to turn their growing stockpile of nuclear fuel into a workable weapon in a matter of months, rather than a year or more — but only if Tehran made a decision to change its current approach.
U.S. officials said they continued to believe that Iran and its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had not made that decision to develop a weapon, officials said in interviews over the past month. But new intelligence suggests that as Iran’s proxy forces have been eviscerated and its missiles have failed to pierce American and Israeli defenses, the military is seriously exploring new options to deter a U.S. or Israeli attack.
Iran, officials said, remains at the nuclear threshold. In the years since Mr. Trump pulled out of the 2015 nuclear accord, the country has resumed uranium production and now has plenty of fuel to make four or more bombs. But that is not enough to actually produce a weapon, and the new evidence focuses on the last steps Iran would need to turn the fuel into one.
The evidence is almost certainly bound to be part of the discussion on Tuesday between Mr. Trump and Israel’s prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. Mr. Netanyahu is the first world leader to visit the White House since Mr. Trump’s inauguration two weeks ago. For years, the Israeli leader has walked to the edge of ordering an Israeli military strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities, only to back away, often under pressure from his own military and intelligence chiefs, and the United States.
But the dynamic now is different, and Mr. Netanyahu’s calculations may be, too.
Iran has never been weaker than it is today, in the view of American and Israeli officials. Hamas and Hezbollah, which it has funded and armed, have lost their leadership and their ability to strike Israel. Syria’s leader, Bashar al-Assad, has fled to Moscow and his country is no longer an easy route for Iranian weapons.
In October, an Israeli counterstrike on Iran took out the missile defenses around Tehran and some of the nuclear facilities. It also
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that make fuel for new missiles, crippling Iranian production.
Mr. Trump has indicated that he is in no hurry to get into a direct conflict with Iran, and seems open to a negotiation. When asked just after the inauguration whether he would support an Israeli strike on the facilities, he said: “Hopefully that can be worked out without having to worry about it. It would really be nice if that could be worked out without having to go that further step.” Iran, he added, will hopefully “make a deal.”
Israel smells blood in the water.
 

FriedButter

Colonel
Registered Member
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OpenAI Founder rules out lawsuit against DeepSeek​

OpenAI has “no plans” to pursue legal action against DeepSeek, a Chinese artificial intelligence startup known for its advanced chatbot, the US company’s founder Sam Altman has announced.

Speaking in Tokyo on Monday, Altman described DeepSeek as “certainly an impressive model” and emphasized OpenAI’s commitment to developing superior products.

DeepSeek, launched in January 2025, has rapidly gained attention with its free, open-source AI chatbot, DeepSeek-R1. In contrast to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which offers advanced features through a subscription model, DeepSeek-R1 is freely accessible.

Shortly after its release, it became the most downloaded free app on the US Apple App Store, attracting interest from AI researchers and tech leaders as a significant competitor to OpenAI.

Last month OpenAI raised concerns that DeepSeek employed “distillation”techniques to replicate GPT’s capabilities. This method involves training a smaller model based on outputs from a larger one, potentially circumventing the need for direct access to proprietary technology. OpenAI has claimed to have evidence supporting that DeepSeek utilized this approach in developing its models.

When questioned about potential legal action, Altman dismissed the notion, stating, “no, we have no plans to sue DeepSeek right now. We are going to just continue to build great products and lead the world with model capability, and I think that will work out fine.” He further expressed that OpenAI welcomes competition.


Following the launch of DeepSeek, the shares of US tech companies associated with AI, including Nvidia and OpenAI’s partner Microsoft, experienced sharp declines as investors reacted to the prospect of a formidable open-source rival.

Meanwhile, concerns regarding DeepSeek’s potential connections to Chinese government-backed initiatives have led some countries and organizations to restrict its use. Australia has issued warnings about DeepSeek, Italy’s data regulator has blocked access to the app over data privacy concerns, and the US Navy has banned servicemen from using it.

US President Donald Trump has also commented on the situation, referring to DeepSeek as a “wake-up call” for American AI companies and urging US industries to remain “laser-focused on competing to win.”

In response to the competition from DeepSeek, OpenAI has announced plans to accelerate the release of improved AI models, aiming to maintain its leading position in the AI industry.

Meanwhile, other countries are intensifying their own AI initiatives. India has announced plans to launch its own DeepSeek and ChatGPT competitor by the end of the year, while South Korea’s Naver and the UAE’s Technology Innovation Institute have been heavily investing in large language models. Russian President Vladimir Putin has also directed the government to collaborate with China on AI development.

In other words, you have nothing but slander.
 
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