CNAP vs Truecaller: Key Differences Between India’s Caller ID Systems

CNAP relies on telecom-verified caller information, whereas Truecaller uses user-contributed data to detect callers and filter spam. Devamını Oku

Poland urges Brussels to probe TikTok over AI-generated content

Poland has asked the European Commission to investigate TikTok after the platform hosted artificial intelligence–generated content calling for Poland to leave the European Union, which authorities said was almost certainly Russian disinformation.

Polish officials said a TikTok profile featuring videos of young women dressed in Polish national colours and promoting an exit from the EU had gained traction in recent weeks before disappearing from the platform. Warsaw argues the content posed risks to public order, information security and democratic processes both in Poland and across the EU.

In a letter to the Commission, Deputy Digitalization Minister Dariusz Standerski said the use of synthetic audiovisual material and the way it was distributed suggested TikTok was failing to meet its obligations as a “Very Large Online Platform” under EU law. A Polish government spokesperson said the videos contained Russian linguistic patterns, pointing to a coordinated disinformation effort.

TikTok said it has been in contact with Polish authorities and removed content where it violated platform rules. A Commission spokesperson confirmed receipt of Poland’s request, noting that under the Digital Services Act (DSA), very large platforms must assess and mitigate risks linked to their services, including those arising from AI-generated content. The Commission added that it had already sought information from TikTok and other platforms in March 2024 on how they address AI-related risks.

EU governments have stepped up scrutiny of social media platforms amid concerns over foreign interference in elections and domestic politics. Last year, the Commission opened formal proceedings against TikTok, which is owned by ByteDance, over its handling of election-related risks, including during Romania’s 2024 presidential vote.

Poland is now urging Brussels to open new proceedings under the DSA, which requires major platforms such as TikTok, Meta’s Facebook and X to remove harmful content. Breaches can result in fines of up to 6% of a company’s global annual turnover.

China’s CXMT eyes $4.2 billion Shanghai listing to fund DRAM expansion

China’s leading dynamic random access memory (DRAM) chipmaker ChangXin Memory Technologies (CXMT) said on Tuesday it plans to raise 29.5 billion yuan ($4.22 billion) through an initial public offering in Shanghai, as it seeks to expand production and narrow the gap with global rivals.

According to its prospectus, CXMT will issue 10.6 billion shares, with proceeds earmarked primarily for upgrading production lines, improving manufacturing technologies and boosting research and development of advanced DRAM products. The listing follows the company’s unveiling last month of its latest DDR5 DRAM chips, directly challenging established competitors in South Korea and the United States.

Founded in 2016 with strong state backing, CXMT has become a cornerstone of China’s ambition to build a domestic memory chip industry. The global DRAM market is currently dominated by Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix and Micron Technology, which together control more than 90% of the market. CXMT held around a 4% global market share in the second quarter, according to data from Omdia cited in the prospectus.

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The company operates three 12-inch DRAM fabrication plants in Beijing and at its headquarters in Hefei, Anhui province. After nine funding rounds, CXMT counts major Chinese investors such as Alibaba and Xiaomi, and has developed four generations of DRAM technology.

CXMT is also investing heavily in high-bandwidth memory (HBM), a specialised form of DRAM essential for advanced processors such as Nvidia’s graphics processing units used in generative AI. The company plans to begin HBM production by the end of 2026 at a back-end packaging facility under construction in Shanghai.

Financially, CXMT expects strong growth. It projects revenue could rise by as much as 140% year-on-year in 2025, driven by higher memory prices and increased sales volumes since July. While the company has posted heavy losses in recent years, it said it could turn profitable as early as 2026, depending on wafer shipments and average selling prices. CXMT reported losses of 8.32 billion yuan in 2022, 16.3 billion yuan in 2023 and 7.1 billion yuan in 2024, and recorded a 2.3-billion-yuan loss in the first half of this year.