Showing posts with label IT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IT. Show all posts

Monday, July 26, 2021

CCP's Tech Seizure

21-8-30 Why China's cracking down on tech — and what's next | CNBC > .
23-9-25 Xi's Transforming Xina [for the worse] - Xina's Changing Trajectory - Dig > .
23-1-23 Xina’s Two-Year Tech Crackdown Winds Up | WSJ > .
> PLA > 

Beijing's regulatory blitz has shocked outsiders and befuddled investors. Here's why it's happening, and what it could mean for China and beyond. 

00:00 - Intro
03:28 - Why now?
05:58 - Shift in mentality
07:35 - New economic order
10:07 - Jack Ma's speech
13:08 - Motivations
15:10 - The issue with data
19:09 - Reallocating resources
22:54 - Regulatory impact
25:12 - Regulatory co-ordination
27:55 - Regulatory risk
29:52 - What's next?

Friday, July 9, 2021

TTC - EU-US Trade and Technology Council

2021 Why the Global Chip Shortage Is Hard to Overcome | WSJ > .
23-12-6 Biden's Inflation Reduction Act: impact on world | FT > .
23-8-29 Understanding the Limits of Innovation || Peter Zeihan >> .
23-7-25 Silicon Triangle | USA, Taiwan, Xina: Semiconductors - Hoover > . full > .
23-4-16 R-U Hybrid Warfare: P00paganda, cyber, hybrid methods - Perun > .
23-3-2 Xina Leads US in Key Technology Research: Report | Focus > .
23-2-7 Why Xina is losing the microchip war - Vox > .
23-1-28 West Strangles Xina's Semiconductor Ambitions - Update > .
23-1-23 Xina’s Two-Year Tech Crackdown Winds Up | WSJ > .
22-12-6 Biden's Pro-American Present for Europe - PZ > .
22-10-12 Biden Bans Xina's Access to Advanced Semiconductors | Zeihan - now > .
22-8-28 Chip War - XiXiP vs CHIPS and Science Act - Update > .


22-8-9 The CHIPS and Science Act (or Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors for America Act), also known as simply the CHIPS Act, is a U.S. federal statute enacted by the 117th United States Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden on August 9, 2022. The act provides billions of dollars in new funding to boost domestic research and manufacturing of semiconductors in the United States.

It channeled more than $52 billion into researching semiconductors and other scientific research, with the primary aim of countering Xina. The bill passed the Senate by a vote of 64–33 on July 27, 2022. On July 28, the $280 billion bill passed the House by a vote of 243–187–1.

The bill was considered amidst a global semiconductor shortage and intended to provide subsidies and tax credits to chip makers with operations in the United States. The Department of Commerce was granted the power to allocate funds based on companies' willingness to sustain research, build facilities, and train new workers.

The CHIPS Act includes $39 billion in tax benefits and other incentives to encourage American companies to build new chip manufacturing plants in the US. Companies are subjected to a ten-year ban prohibiting them from producing chips more advanced than 28-nanometers in Xina and Russia if they are awarded subsidies under the act.

America COMPETES Act of 2022 – original House version
United States Innovation and Competition Act – original Senate version

20-6-15 EU-US launch Trade and Technology Council to lead values-based global digital transformation:

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and President Joe Biden of the United States have launched the EU-US Trade and Technology Council (TTC) at the US-EU Summit in Brussels on June 15, 2021.

The TTC will serve as a forum for the United States and European Union to coordinate approaches to key global trade, economic, and technology issues and to deepen transatlantic trade and economic relations based on shared democratic values.

Main goals of the TTC
  • Expand and deepen bilateral trade and investment
  • Avoid new technical barriers to trade
  • Cooperate on key policies on technology, digital issues and supply chains
  • Support collaborative research
  • Cooperate on the development of compatible and international standards
  • Facilitate cooperation on regulatory policy and enforcement
  • Promote innovation and leadership by EU and US firms
This new Council will meet periodically at political level to steer the cooperation. It will be co-chaired by European Commission Executive Vice-President and EU Competition Commissioner, Margrethe Vestager; European Commission Executive Vice-President and EU Trade Commissioner, Valdis Dombrovskis; US Secretary of State, Antony Blinken; US Secretary of Commerce, Gina Raimondo; and US Trade Representative, Katherine Tai. Other Members of the College and of US Departments will be invited as appropriate, ensuring focused discussions on specific issues in a whole-of-government approach.

In parallel, the EU and the US have set up a Joint Technology Competition Policy Dialogue that will focus on developing common approaches and strengthening the cooperation on competition policy and enforcement in the tech sectors.


Chip shortage addressed by US-EU tech alliance: Manufacturing more computer chips in Europe and the US will be one of the key focuses of a new technology alliance between the two. The Trade and Technology Council (TTC) was unveiled following talks between European commissioner Margrethe Vestager and US President Joe Biden. The group will also seek to set common standards for new technologies such as artificial intelligence. Both sides are concerned by the rise of China as a technology superpower.

Saturday, February 8, 2020

US Cybersecurity

2021 Why Isn’t U.S. Cybersecurity Infrastructure Good Enough? - Seeker > .
24-1-29 [Did E Peng III cut Baltic submarine cable?] - Update > .
24-6-20 Hazardous Life of an Undersea Cable - Asianometry > .
24-2-19 AI Played Wargames - Result Not Reassuring - Sabine > .
24-2-16 Undersea Cables, Sabotage, Internet, Surveillance - CuDr > . skip > .
24-2-15 H4D - Hacking for Defense, Gordian Knot | Policy Stories - Hoover > .
23-12-20 Undersea fibre-optic cables could be geopolitical frontier | ABC Aus > .
23-9-30 Internet Backbone = Hidden Infrastructure - B1M > .
23-8-29 Major FBI Operation Targeted Qakbot Botnet - Director Wray > .
23-8-11 Yandex as Most Dangerous Company | Co-Founder (subs) - Katz > .
23-4-16 R-U Hybrid Warfare: P00paganda, cyber, hybrid methods - Perun > .
23-3-3 Generative AI, ChatGPT, CG Art: Future of Work - Patrick Boyle > . skip > .
22-9-29 Pegasus: The Most Dangerous Virus In The World - Tech > .


Cyberattacks around the world, and especially in the U.S., have been on the rise. What can we do to combat it?

Cyberattacks seem to be really having a moment. Take the US, for example: the FBI has reported 4,000 attacks a DAY since the COVID pandemic began, and there’s no sign of things slowing down. But how exactly did we get to this point, and how can cybersecurity help us get out of this mess?

The infrastructure that we use every single day, in our houses, in our cars, in our workplaces, and generally in the country as a whole, is full of computing systems. Anything that prevents us from getting things done, or in some way makes that computing infrastructure create a negative event, we could consider that to be a threat.
The need for protection against cyber attacks really came into focus with STUXNET, the world’s first digital weapon. In 2010, it was found targeting Iran’s nuclear facilities, and in the process, proving that cyberattacks could have devastating consequences beyond the digital realm.

Computers today are more complex than ever, as are the types of threats they face. The more we ask our computers to do—open an email, visit a webpage, join a network—the more potential points of attack emerge.
 
Age of the cyber-attack: US struggles to curb rise of digital destabilization
https://www.theguardian.com/technolog... .
"There has been a 62% increase in ransomware globally since 2019, and 158% spike in North America"

Experts Say Cyberattacks Likely To Result In Blackouts In U.S.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/jimmagil... .
"Cybersecurity experts agree that at some point in the near future cyber criminals based in other countries could shut at least some portions of the U.S. power grid, if not the entire grid."

Global cybersecurity leaders say they feel unprepared for attack: report
https://thehill.com/policy/cybersecur... .
"Around 64 percent of CISOs said they believe they will face some form of cyberattack in the next 12 months."

Wednesday, June 20, 2018

Innovation Race & Crisis

24-8-9 Why ChatGPT sucks at some languages - nature > .

Hybrid Warfare, Intelligence2022 ..
Innovation Race & Crisis ..


22-2-4 Emerging technologies are changing who can collect, analyze, and act on information on a global scale. Commercial satellite imagery enabled private citizens to observe the buildup of Russian troops near the Ukraine border and social media platforms provide nefarious actors with a vast battleground to conduct information warfare. Amy Zegart joins us virtually to discuss what she learned about how technology is changing intelligence while researching her latest book, Spies, Lies, and Algorithms: The History and Future of American Intelligence.

[Warning about the risk of a world dominated by a racist, autocratic bully — the CCP. Racist? Yup, in that, by dint of early civilization, the Chinese view Han Chinese as superior to all other nations, the CCP is worse than the racist-subset of Americans.]  

Amy Zegart (born 1967) is an American academic. She serves as the co-director of the Center for International Security and Cooperation (CISAC) at Stanford University; a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution; and professor of political economy (by courtesy) at the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Amy Zegart is the Morris Arnold and Nona Jean Cox Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, where she chairs the Working Group on Technology, Economics, and Governance. She’s also a professor of political science at Stanford, and an expert on intelligence, cybersecurity, and big tech. In this wide-ranging conversation, Professor Zegart discusses the US relationship with China and how she views that country’s aggressive stance toward Taiwan; why big tech companies are a potential threat not only to privacy, but also to our national security; and why the next war may well be fought with a keyboard rather than on a battlefield.

Zegart is a leading national expert on the United States Intelligence Community and national security policy. She has written three books on the topic: Flawed By Design, which chronicled the evolution of the relationship between the United States Department of Defense, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Council; Spying Blind, which examined U.S. intelligence agencies in the period preceding the September 11 attacks in 2001; and Eyes on Spies, which examined the weaknesses of U.S. intelligence oversight.

sī vīs pācem, parā bellum

igitur quī dēsīderat pācem praeparet bellum    therefore, he who desires peace, let him prepare for war sī vīs pācem, parā bellum if you wan...