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Meta Acquires AI Startup Manus in $2 Billion Deal

Meta Acquires AI Startup Manus in $2 Billion Deal
Meta has completed a high‑profile acquisition of Manus, an AI startup famed for its custom research and website‑building agents. Valued at more than $2 billion, the deal marks one of the largest purchases of a company emerging from China’s AI ecosystem. Manus, originally known as Butterfly Effect, describes itself as “the first general AI agent,” drawing on models such as Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet and Alibaba’s Qwen to automate tasks ranging from market research to coding. The startup, now based in Singapore after laying off most of its Beijing staff, claims to serve millions of users and generate over $100 million in annualized revenue just eight months after launch. Read more →

Chinese Open-Weight Model Qwen Surpasses U.S. Counterparts in Adoption

Chinese Open-Weight Model Qwen Surpasses U.S. Counterparts in Adoption
The open‑weight large language model Qwen, developed by Alibaba, is rapidly gaining global traction. Its ease of download and modification has led to integration across a range of products, from smart glasses to vehicle dashboards, and adoption by companies such as Rokid, BYD, Airbnb, Perplexity, Nvidia, and even Meta. The model’s popularity contrasts with the lukewarm reception of recent U.S. releases like GPT‑5 and Llama 4, highlighting a shift toward openly shared AI research in China and a broader impact measured by real‑world usage rather than narrow benchmarks. Read more →

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives
China has halted the sale of Nvidia's AI chips after regulators summoned major domestic firms, including Huawei, Cambricon, Alibaba and Baidu, to compare their own processors with Nvidia's limited‑supply products. Officials concluded that Chinese AI chips now match or exceed the performance of the Nvidia chips allowed under U.S. export controls, prompting a consensus that domestic supply can meet demand without further Nvidia imports. Nvidia recently introduced the RTX Pro 6000D in Beijing, while regulators warned companies against purchasing Nvidia’s H20 chip, signalling a tightening of restrictions on foreign AI hardware. Read more →

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips
China's Cyberspace Administration has ordered local technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, to cancel orders and halt testing of NVIDIA's latest AI GPU. The directive stops the purchase of the RTX Pro 6000D model and reflects a stricter stance than earlier guidance on older chips. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment, noting the limitations imposed by the ban. The move follows earlier U.S. export restrictions and comes amid Chinese regulators' assessment that domestic chips now match or exceed foreign offerings. Read more →

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips
China’s Cyberspace Administration has prohibited domestic technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, from buying Nvidia AI chips such as the RTX Pro 6000D server. The move follows earlier encouragement for firms to use locally‑made alternatives. Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment but affirmed the company will respect the market’s wishes. The ban adds to a broader backdrop of U.S. licensing requirements that have limited Nvidia’s sales in China, with the firm forecasting significant revenue loss and noting that recent U.S. license approvals have yet to translate into actual shipments. Read more →

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips
China's Cyberspace Administration has ordered local technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, to cancel orders and halt testing of NVIDIA's latest AI GPU. The directive stops the purchase of the RTX Pro 6000D model and reflects a stricter stance than earlier guidance on older chips. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment, noting the limitations imposed by the ban. The move follows earlier U.S. export restrictions and comes amid Chinese regulators' assessment that domestic chips now match or exceed foreign offerings. Read more →

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives
China has halted the sale of Nvidia's AI chips after regulators summoned major domestic firms, including Huawei, Cambricon, Alibaba and Baidu, to compare their own processors with Nvidia's limited‑supply products. Officials concluded that Chinese AI chips now match or exceed the performance of the Nvidia chips allowed under U.S. export controls, prompting a consensus that domestic supply can meet demand without further Nvidia imports. Nvidia recently introduced the RTX Pro 6000D in Beijing, while regulators warned companies against purchasing Nvidia’s H20 chip, signalling a tightening of restrictions on foreign AI hardware. Read more →

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips
China's Cyberspace Administration has ordered local technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, to cancel orders and halt testing of NVIDIA's latest AI GPU. The directive stops the purchase of the RTX Pro 6000D model and reflects a stricter stance than earlier guidance on older chips. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment, noting the limitations imposed by the ban. The move follows earlier U.S. export restrictions and comes amid Chinese regulators' assessment that domestic chips now match or exceed foreign offerings. Read more →

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives
China has halted the sale of Nvidia's AI chips after regulators summoned major domestic firms, including Huawei, Cambricon, Alibaba and Baidu, to compare their own processors with Nvidia's limited‑supply products. Officials concluded that Chinese AI chips now match or exceed the performance of the Nvidia chips allowed under U.S. export controls, prompting a consensus that domestic supply can meet demand without further Nvidia imports. Nvidia recently introduced the RTX Pro 6000D in Beijing, while regulators warned companies against purchasing Nvidia’s H20 chip, signalling a tightening of restrictions on foreign AI hardware. Read more →

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips
China’s Cyberspace Administration has prohibited domestic technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, from buying Nvidia AI chips such as the RTX Pro 6000D server. The move follows earlier encouragement for firms to use locally‑made alternatives. Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment but affirmed the company will respect the market’s wishes. The ban adds to a broader backdrop of U.S. licensing requirements that have limited Nvidia’s sales in China, with the firm forecasting significant revenue loss and noting that recent U.S. license approvals have yet to translate into actual shipments. Read more →

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips
China’s Cyberspace Administration has prohibited domestic technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, from buying Nvidia AI chips such as the RTX Pro 6000D server. The move follows earlier encouragement for firms to use locally‑made alternatives. Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment but affirmed the company will respect the market’s wishes. The ban adds to a broader backdrop of U.S. licensing requirements that have limited Nvidia’s sales in China, with the firm forecasting significant revenue loss and noting that recent U.S. license approvals have yet to translate into actual shipments. Read more →

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips
China's Cyberspace Administration has ordered local technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, to cancel orders and halt testing of NVIDIA's latest AI GPU. The directive stops the purchase of the RTX Pro 6000D model and reflects a stricter stance than earlier guidance on older chips. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment, noting the limitations imposed by the ban. The move follows earlier U.S. export restrictions and comes amid Chinese regulators' assessment that domestic chips now match or exceed foreign offerings. Read more →

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives
China has halted the sale of Nvidia's AI chips after regulators summoned major domestic firms, including Huawei, Cambricon, Alibaba and Baidu, to compare their own processors with Nvidia's limited‑supply products. Officials concluded that Chinese AI chips now match or exceed the performance of the Nvidia chips allowed under U.S. export controls, prompting a consensus that domestic supply can meet demand without further Nvidia imports. Nvidia recently introduced the RTX Pro 6000D in Beijing, while regulators warned companies against purchasing Nvidia’s H20 chip, signalling a tightening of restrictions on foreign AI hardware. Read more →

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips
China’s Cyberspace Administration has prohibited domestic technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, from buying Nvidia AI chips such as the RTX Pro 6000D server. The move follows earlier encouragement for firms to use locally‑made alternatives. Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment but affirmed the company will respect the market’s wishes. The ban adds to a broader backdrop of U.S. licensing requirements that have limited Nvidia’s sales in China, with the firm forecasting significant revenue loss and noting that recent U.S. license approvals have yet to translate into actual shipments. Read more →

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips

China Bars Domestic Firms from Purchasing Nvidia AI Chips
China’s Cyberspace Administration has prohibited domestic technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, from buying Nvidia AI chips such as the RTX Pro 6000D server. The move follows earlier encouragement for firms to use locally‑made alternatives. Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment but affirmed the company will respect the market’s wishes. The ban adds to a broader backdrop of U.S. licensing requirements that have limited Nvidia’s sales in China, with the firm forecasting significant revenue loss and noting that recent U.S. license approvals have yet to translate into actual shipments. Read more →

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives

China Blocks Sale of Nvidia AI Chips Amid Push for Domestic Alternatives
China has halted the sale of Nvidia's AI chips after regulators summoned major domestic firms, including Huawei, Cambricon, Alibaba and Baidu, to compare their own processors with Nvidia's limited‑supply products. Officials concluded that Chinese AI chips now match or exceed the performance of the Nvidia chips allowed under U.S. export controls, prompting a consensus that domestic supply can meet demand without further Nvidia imports. Nvidia recently introduced the RTX Pro 6000D in Beijing, while regulators warned companies against purchasing Nvidia’s H20 chip, signalling a tightening of restrictions on foreign AI hardware. Read more →

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips
China's Cyberspace Administration has ordered local technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, to cancel orders and halt testing of NVIDIA's latest AI GPU. The directive stops the purchase of the RTX Pro 6000D model and reflects a stricter stance than earlier guidance on older chips. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment, noting the limitations imposed by the ban. The move follows earlier U.S. export restrictions and comes amid Chinese regulators' assessment that domestic chips now match or exceed foreign offerings. Read more →

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips

China Bans Domestic Tech Firms from Purchasing NVIDIA AI Chips
China's Cyberspace Administration has ordered local technology companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, to cancel orders and halt testing of NVIDIA's latest AI GPU. The directive stops the purchase of the RTX Pro 6000D model and reflects a stricter stance than earlier guidance on older chips. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment, noting the limitations imposed by the ban. The move follows earlier U.S. export restrictions and comes amid Chinese regulators' assessment that domestic chips now match or exceed foreign offerings. Read more →

Chinese Regulators Push Back on NVIDIA AI Chip Sales After Lutnick Remarks

Chinese Regulators Push Back on NVIDIA AI Chip Sales After Lutnick Remarks
China's cyber and industrial regulators have issued informal notices to major tech firms, urging them to halt new orders for NVIDIA's H20 AI chips. The move follows remarks by NVIDIA head Howard Lutnick that the United States intentionally supplies China with lower‑tier chips. The United States had previously blocked, then later permitted, shipments of the chips. In response, Chinese authorities are encouraging the use of domestic chips and have warned of potential fines for non‑compliance. Meanwhile, NVIDIA is reportedly developing a new, lower‑performance chip for the Chinese market based on its Blackwell architecture. Read more →

Alibaba Group Launches Open-Sourced AI Model, Challenging Meta

Alibaba Group Launches Open-Sourced AI Model, Challenging Meta
In an astounding move that escalates the technological rivalry in the field of artificial intelligence, giant tech player Alibaba has propagated two revolutionary open-source models called Tongyi Qianwen, along with Qwen-7B and its variant, Qwen-7B-Chat. These cutting-edge products aim to challenge other major players like Meta's advanced AI text model, Learning from Language Model (LLM) , or known as LLama. Read more →