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China Slams U.S. as “Surveillance Empire” Over Chip Shipment Trackers

China’s state-run media Xinhua criticized the United States on Friday for secretly placing location trackers in shipments of advanced chips at risk of diversion to China, calling the practice indicative of the “instincts of a surveillance empire.” Reuters had reported earlier that U.S. authorities embedded these devices to monitor shipments subject to export restrictions aimed at curbing China’s access to advanced semiconductor technology.

In a commentary titled “America turns chip trade into a surveillance game,” Xinhua accused Washington of running “the world’s most sprawling intelligence apparatus” and treating trade partners as rivals to be undermined. The piece warned that if U.S. chips are perceived as potential surveillance tools, global customers may seek alternatives.

The commentary reflects ongoing tensions between the two tech superpowers. The U.S. government has imposed strict limits on exports of advanced chips and related equipment to China, while Washington and its allies have previously accused China of embedding potential surveillance capabilities in exported products, ranging from telecom gear to vehicles.

In recent moves, China has asked U.S. chipmaker Nvidia to clarify whether its H20 chips contain hidden backdoors and has cautioned domestic tech companies about their use, amid heightened scrutiny of foreign technology for security risks.

Trump Administration Explores Potential Stake in Intel Amid Push for Domestic Chip Manufacturing

The Trump administration is reportedly in discussions with Intel (INTC.O) to potentially acquire a stake in the U.S. chipmaker, Bloomberg News reported on Thursday, citing sources familiar with the talks. The move would be another example of President Donald Trump’s interventions in industries considered critical to national security. In the past, Trump has promoted multibillion-dollar government partnerships in semiconductors and rare-earth minerals, including a deal with Nvidia (NVDA.O) and an arrangement with MP Materials.

Intel declined to comment on the report but reaffirmed its commitment to supporting the administration’s efforts to bolster U.S. technology and manufacturing leadership. White House spokesman Kush Desai cautioned that discussions about “hypothetical deals” should be viewed as speculation until officially announced.

Intel shares rose more than 7% during regular trading and added another 2.6% in after-hours trading. The discussions follow a recent meeting between Trump and Intel CEO Lip-Bu Tan, occurring just days after Trump publicly called for Tan’s resignation over his investments in Chinese technology firms, some of which have ties to the Chinese military. Details about the size of the stake and pricing are still under negotiation.

Analysts suggest the government stake would likely aim to support Intel’s domestic manufacturing expansion and job creation. Intel has previously warned it may need to exit chip manufacturing without sufficient external customers and has planned to slow construction on new Ohio factories. CEO Lip-Bu Tan, in his role for just over six months, has been tasked with reversing years of setbacks that left Intel behind in the fast-growing AI chip market dominated by Nvidia.

Market experts note that any potential deal could include tariffs designed to encourage major clients like Nvidia, AMD (AMD.O), and Apple (AAPL.O) to utilize Intel Foundry services. While government stakes in companies are not unprecedented, some investors question whether Intel, with stable revenue exceeding $50 billion annually despite a loss in industry leadership, requires direct government investment.

AI Startup Cohere Valued at $6.8 Billion in Latest Fundraising, Hires Meta Exec

Canadian AI startup Cohere raised $500 million in its latest funding round, pushing its valuation to $6.8 billion as it targets enterprise AI expansion. The round was led by Radical Ventures and Inovia Capital, with participation from AMD Ventures, Nvidia (NVDA.O), PSP Investments, Salesforce Ventures, and other existing investors.

Unlike broad AI models from OpenAI or Meta’s Llama, Cohere focuses on enterprise-specific AI solutions. Co-founder Nick Frosst said the new funding will help the company expand globally, explore different AI modalities—including its recently launched Command Vision model—and continue building secure AI tools for businesses.

Cohere also appointed two senior executives: Joelle Pineau, former VP of AI Research at Meta (META.O), as chief AI officer, and Francois Chadwick, ex-Uber and Shield AI executive, as chief financial officer. Pineau led Meta’s Fundamental AI Research group until May 2025.

Earlier this year, Cohere launched North, a ChatGPT-style tool designed to assist knowledge workers with tasks like document summarization. The company plans to use the funding to develop agentic AI aimed at improving operational efficiency for businesses and government agencies.

The fundraising comes amid a broader surge in AI investment, with private equity firms and Big Tech pouring capital into startups to capture returns from innovative AI technologies.