China orders Alibaba, ByteDance to stop buying Nvidia H20 chips as tech tensions escalate

China’s growing mistrust of Nvidia’s H20 GPU is spilling into open confrontation, with regulators ordering leading internet firms, including Alibaba and ByteDance, to suspend orders amid security concerns. The move comes despite US President Donald Trump’s formal approval of the chip’s export, underscoring the deep political undercurrents shaping tech supply chains.

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Taiwan, US eye closer trade ties in ongoing tariff negotiations

Taiwan’s lead negotiator and vice premier of the Executive Yuan Li-chiun Cheng held a press conference on August 11, 2025, during which she stated that since the US aims to become the global center for AI, there is significant room for complementary cooperation between Taiwan and the US. She emphasized that the government and industry players are joining forces to foster strategic collaboration, build a favorable foundation, and strive for better negotiation outcomes with the US.

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China to start mass production of domestic HBM3 chips, paving way for Huawei AI integration

China’s domestic high-bandwidth memory (HBM) technology has reportedly reached a major milestone, with one of the nation’s top DRAM manufacturers beginning mass production of HBM3 chips using a homegrown 16nm G4 process. Industry sources say sample shipments to Huawei are already in progress, and the product is undergoing final verification.

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Trump halts Biden-era EV charging program, US plans in disarray

The global electric vehicle market is increasingly dominated by three major regions: China, Europe, and the United States. While China’s EV ecosystem—including vehicle sales and charging infrastructure—continues to accelerate, Germany faces setbacks due to underused public charging stations. In the United States, however, a dramatic policy reversal under President Donald Trump is threatening to unravel recent federal efforts to build a more equitable and accessible charging network.

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Auto tariff break offers lifeline to Japan, EU, and South Korean carmakers

President Donald Trump has reached a new tariff agreement with key US trade partners, including the European Union, Japan, and South Korea, setting a unified reciprocal tariff rate of 15% that for the first time includes automobiles and auto parts. The policy, which took effect on August 7, 2025, could deliver a significant boost to foreign carmakers and suppliers operating in the US, but uncertainty lingers.

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