Hello, and welcome to this Wednesday's edition of the Insider Tech newsletter, where we break down the biggest news in tech. I'm your host Alexei Oreskovic. Soundtrack: This week's newsletter has been specially designed to be consumed while listening to Dire Straits' "Once Upon a Time in the West." This Week: Chips, vaccines and 'techno autocracies' — Why Big Tech and Biden are going to be friends There are two things the world can't get enough of right now: vaccines and chips. One is an urgent matter of life and death; the other, a temporary business disruption with long term geopolitical implications. On Tuesday, the US government stepped in to alleviate the coronavirus vaccine shortage, brokering an agreement between longtime competitors Merck & Co and Johnson & Johnson to mass produce the latter's vaccine. In a sign of how seriously it's taking the shortage, the Biden administration is using the Korean-War-era Defense Production Act to lend a federal hand to the pharmaceutical industry. The chip shortage — which has forced automobile plants to temporarily halt production and is causing angst among computer and consumer electronics makers — also attracted federal attention last week, with President Biden's executive order for a 100-day review of the semiconductor supply chain. So far Biden hasn't invoked the Defense Production Act to resolve the chip crunch, but that could change — especially as discussion about the chip shortage blurs the distinction between a commercial matter and a national security issue. - On Monday, a 756-page report by the National Security Commission on AI warned that the US risked being overtaken by China as the world's "AI superpower." According to the report, co-authored by former Google CEO Eric Schmidt, the US needs to get serious about developing offensive and defensive artificial intelligence weapons before China achieves an unstoppable advantage.
- Bleeding-edge chips are a vital ingredient in the AI arms race, and right now, the report warns, America's weak domestic semiconductor production capability is a major weakness. The most advanced chip fabrication facility that America relies on — TSMC, or Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp— is "separated by just 110 miles of water from our principal strategic competitor" the report points out.
- Among the report's recommendations: money, money, money. The federal government should spend "perhaps $35 billion" in investment and incentives to revitalize domestic microchip fabrication, the report recommends. And it says hundreds of billions of dollars in federal spending would be appropriate in the coming years to help the US catch up on various AI initiatives.
It's hard not to be cynical and see the makings of a 21st century techno-military-industrial complex in all of this, especially given that several members of the commission's 15-person panel are tech industry insiders with a vested interest in fear-driven government tech spending. Among the members are Schmidt, Amazon Web Services CEO Andy Jassy, and Oracle CEO Safra Catz. But that's not to say the concerns about weaponized AI and the tech rivalry with China aren't legitimate. The Biden administration, in any case, appears to subscribe to this worldview: Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned about the growing divide between "techno democracies and techno autocracies" during his confirmation hearings in January. We've heard a lot about vaccine diplomacy in recent months. When the coronavirus threat is eventually extinguished though, the policies of chips and of chip companies — shortage or not — will become increasingly important in world affairs. Speaking of potential US-China tech war, remember CFIUS, the interagency group tasked with overseeing foreign investments in US companies, and which was at the center of the Trump-TikTok saga? The Biden administration does not appear to be as concerned about TikTok as Trump was, but CFIUS is still on the lookout for dangerous foreign investments in US, particularly from China. As Matt Drange reports, CFIUS set up a special 'tip line' over the summer in hopes that Silicon Valley's VCs, founders, and engineers might spring to action as a network of informers, phoning in reports about about suspicious tech deals with suspicious foreign ties. So far, it isn't going well. NFT WTF? If you're confused by all the recent buzz about NFTs, or perhaps even trying to understand what the heck a non-fungible token even is, we've got you covered. The first thing to know is that non-fungible has nothing to do with mushrooms. It just means that the digital item in question is unique — a counterintuitive trait in a world of 1s and 0s that's somehow made possible by the power of blockchain. To learn more about how NFTs work, and everything else you're wondering, check out these helpful links: What you need to know about NFTs, the collectible digital tokens that are selling for millions online Grimes made $5.8 million in under 20 minutes selling crypto-based artwork 'Nyan Cat' flying Pop-Tart meme sells for nearly $600,000 as one-of-a-kind crypto art "Strengthen your resiliency muscles by raising your hand for the hard problems. You will either succeed, or you will learn. You will not fail either way." — Zoox CEO Aicha S. Evans describing the career advice she frequently offers, which is based on advice that Intel cofounder Andy Grove gave her when she began her career. Recommended Readings: Industry insiders say DraftKings is having M&A talks with a variety of potential targets. Here are the companies that could be on its shopping list and why. Satya Nadella laid out the 5 factors Microsoft believes will shape the future of cloud computing VC investors are making big moves into Nigeria. Here's why the African giant could be the next fintech frontier. Zoom showed Wall Street that it can still boom even as life gets closer to normal Google has signed a number of little-known revenue share agreements with ad companies — but some smaller firms describe them as unfair 'sweetheart deals' Oracle employees say the tech titan hasn't provided enough clarity on its flexible-work policy and that moving the headquarters from Silicon Valley to Austin has been 'just a ceremony' Not necessarily in tech: I asked MyPillow whether it sells customer data to political committees. Mike Lindell called back — and things got interesting. |
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