Daily Briefing
OpenAI launches first chip; Alibaba sues US government; China defends it's right to target abroad

29 Articles • 4 hours ago
China Defends Right to Target People Abroad Under New Ethnic Unity Law
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What happened: China's National People's Congress adopted a 65-article Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress Law on March 12, set to take effect July 1. Article 63 allows legal liability for people and organizations abroad accused of undermining ethnic unity or promoting separatism, drawing condemnation from UN rapporteurs and the European Parliament in April.
Why it matters: The law's vague extraterritorial provisions could expose academics, journalists, businesses, and diaspora communities abroad to legal and political risks for speech or activities China deems threatening. Taiwanese scholars, foreign media reporting on Xinjiang or Tibet, and politicians supporting Taiwan could all be unilaterally deemed illegal by Beijing.
86% of sources are Original Reporting

28 Articles • 4 hours ago
OpenAI Launches First Custom AI Chip With Broadcom
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What happened: OpenAI and Broadcom unveiled Jalapeño, OpenAI's first custom AI inference chip designed in nine months, with initial deployment targeted by the end of this year. A physical sample was delivered on Wednesday, marking the ChatGPT maker's entry into AI silicon after an 18-month partnership.
Why it matters: The custom chip could cut AI inference costs by roughly 50% and deliver substantially better energy efficiency compared to current GPUs, potentially making AI services faster and more accessible. OpenAI's move to control its infrastructure stack may reduce operating costs as demand for AI services continues to surge.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

51 Articles • 10 hours ago
Alibaba Sues Pentagon Over Chinese Military Company Blacklist
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What happened: Alibaba filed a federal lawsuit yesterday in San Jose seeking removal from the Pentagon's June 8 blacklist of 188 Chinese military companies. The e-commerce and cloud services giant argues the designation lacks factual or legal basis and was made without due process, as the company only learned of it through the Federal Register.
Why it matters: The designation blocks Alibaba from Pentagon contracts starting June 30 and prevents the company from retaining longtime lobbyists and legal advocates. The label serves as a red flag to U.S. investors including major shareholders JPMorgan, Citigroup, and BlackRock, potentially triggering more punitive trade restrictions.
78% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles • 10 hours ago
Dettol Apologizes and Retracts 'Toxic Men' Advert in China
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C 21%
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What happened: Dettol pulled a five-minute micro-drama advertisement in China on June 21 after widespread backlash accused it of objectifying women by linking a woman's 'purity' to cleanliness. The brand apologized on June 22, saying the ad was meant to criticize sexism but acknowledged it offended many and promised to review its content processes.
Why it matters: Legal experts warn the ad may violate China's advertising and women's rights laws, potentially exposing Dettol's owner Reckitt to fines up to 1 million yuan or license revocation. The controversy highlights growing scrutiny of sexist advertising in China and could damage the brand's reputation in a major market.
87% of sources are Original Reporting
Daily Briefing
OpenAI launches first chip; Alibaba sues US government; China defends it's right to target abroad


29 Articles • 4 hours ago
China Defends Right to Target People Abroad Under New Ethnic Unity Law
Left 60%
7%
Right 33%
What happened: China's National People's Congress adopted a 65-article Promoting Ethnic Unity and Progress Law on March 12, set to take effect July 1. Article 63 allows legal liability for people and organizations abroad accused of undermining ethnic unity or promoting separatism, drawing condemnation from UN rapporteurs and the European Parliament in April.
Why it matters: The law's vague extraterritorial provisions could expose academics, journalists, businesses, and diaspora communities abroad to legal and political risks for speech or activities China deems threatening. Taiwanese scholars, foreign media reporting on Xinjiang or Tibet, and politicians supporting Taiwan could all be unilaterally deemed illegal by Beijing.
86% of sources are Original Reporting

28 Articles • 4 hours ago
OpenAI Launches First Custom AI Chip With Broadcom
Left 27%
Center 40%
Right 33%
What happened: OpenAI and Broadcom unveiled Jalapeño, OpenAI's first custom AI inference chip designed in nine months, with initial deployment targeted by the end of this year. A physical sample was delivered on Wednesday, marking the ChatGPT maker's entry into AI silicon after an 18-month partnership.
Why it matters: The custom chip could cut AI inference costs by roughly 50% and deliver substantially better energy efficiency compared to current GPUs, potentially making AI services faster and more accessible. OpenAI's move to control its infrastructure stack may reduce operating costs as demand for AI services continues to surge.
89% of sources are Original Reporting

51 Articles • 10 hours ago
Alibaba Sues Pentagon Over Chinese Military Company Blacklist
L 23%
Center 42%
Right 35%
What happened: Alibaba filed a federal lawsuit yesterday in San Jose seeking removal from the Pentagon's June 8 blacklist of 188 Chinese military companies. The e-commerce and cloud services giant argues the designation lacks factual or legal basis and was made without due process, as the company only learned of it through the Federal Register.
Why it matters: The designation blocks Alibaba from Pentagon contracts starting June 30 and prevents the company from retaining longtime lobbyists and legal advocates. The label serves as a red flag to U.S. investors including major shareholders JPMorgan, Citigroup, and BlackRock, potentially triggering more punitive trade restrictions.
78% of sources are Original Reporting

23 Articles • 10 hours ago
Dettol Apologizes and Retracts 'Toxic Men' Advert in China
Left 50%
C 21%
Right 29%
What happened: Dettol pulled a five-minute micro-drama advertisement in China on June 21 after widespread backlash accused it of objectifying women by linking a woman's 'purity' to cleanliness. The brand apologized on June 22, saying the ad was meant to criticize sexism but acknowledged it offended many and promised to review its content processes.
Why it matters: Legal experts warn the ad may violate China's advertising and women's rights laws, potentially exposing Dettol's owner Reckitt to fines up to 1 million yuan or license revocation. The controversy highlights growing scrutiny of sexist advertising in China and could damage the brand's reputation in a major market.
87% of sources are Original Reporting