Artificial intelligence for missiles
Top business and technology news for February 6, 2017. Part of the daily The China Projectย news roundup "Chinese troops in Afghanistan."
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Chinaโs intelligent weaponry gets smarterย / NYT (paywall)
The U.S. โno longer has a strategic monopolyโ on military technology that integrates artificial intelligence (AI), such as long-range missiles that avoid defenses and make targeting decisions semi-autonomously and speech-recognition software that can be applied for surveillance. Chinese businesses have recently made key moves forward in AI research: Less than a month ago, tech giant Baidu hired top AI engineer Qi Luย over from Microsoft, but Chinese companies have been investing in the space for years (listen to this Sinica Podcastย with Andrew Ng, chief scientist of Baidu for more). Military-applied AI has a smoother path in China, where technology companies and the government have a โcozy relationship,โ whereas the U.S. tech world is stuck in a dilemma made public as a result of the Snowden revelations: Silicon Valley companies must keep a distance from the U.S. government in order to expand into the China market, or partner with the Pentagon and get shut out from China.
- In pictures: C919, Chinaโs answer to Airbus A320 and Boeing B737, set to make debut flightย – Chinaโs airlines have placed 570 orders for the aircraft / SCMP
- Overseas Chinese acquisitions worth $75 billion canceled last yearย / CNBC
- Chinese luxury shoppersโ newest destination: Chinaย / WSJ (paywall)
- China services sector extends strong growth in January but pace eases: Caixin PMIย / Reuters
- China to add more than 50 million new urban jobs in 2016-2020: cabinetย / Reuters