Developers in China are working with brokers to access computing power overseas, sometimes masking their identity using techniques from the crypto world.
Chinese technology companies cut off from the world’s most advanced chips for artificial-intelligence computing are rallying around an appealing message from industry pioneers: to make money, they might not necessarily need them.
Hong Kong-listed shares in JD.com fell by the most in nearly two years after U.S. retailer Walmart moved to sell its stake in the e-commerce giant worth up to $3.7 billion.
The OpenAI chief’s Worldcoin project involves an attempt to scan the irises of every person on Earth and pay them with his own cryptocurrency. Authorities aren’t buying it.
Charging isn’t the headache that many people think it is. The outlet that’s already in your garage is almost always all you’ll need to keep an EV running.
Lenovo’s profits rose for a second-straight quarter as the world’s largest PC maker emerges from a yearslong downturn in the industry and captures opportunities in artificial intelligence to drive growth.
The world’s largest contract electronics maker reported higher quarterly net profit as its revenue rose to a record on robust demand for artificial-intelligence servers.
The Silicon Valley native joined Google as one of its earliest employees, was instrumental in its rise and stepped down last year after nearly a decade running its video platform.
Billions of dollars of venture capital is flowing into defense-tech startups focused on futuristic, AI-enabled weapons. Palmer Luckey’s Anduril is their biggest bet.
Shares in Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. rose sharply in Hong Kong on its better-than-expected quarterly results and rosy guidance, signaling a stronger recovery in demand.
SK Hynix second-quarter net profit rose sharply, keeping up the momentum of its first-quarter turnaround on AI-fueled demand for advanced computer chips.