The Department of Commerce added 28 new companies and agencies to its running “blacklist” of Chinese firms banned from doing business in the United States, with a notable focus on companies that specialize in artificial intelligence, machine learning and digital surveillance.

Copyright by www.cnbc.com

SwissCognitiveThe move has already hit suppliers to the companies named, and roiled markets Tuesday on fears of wavering trade talks .

Together, the companies show clearly the direction Commerce will continue to take with its blacklist. Namely, it’s looking at Chinese companies that are already global, that provide tech infrastructure that is hard to replace once it’s been acquired, and that could feasibly be used to bolster China’s intelligence and military organizations.

Blacklisting these companies should please some in the intelligence community who have long argued that allowing Chinese companies to provide technological infrastructure to the U.S. would undercut the ability of the U.S. to defend itself. But it will also create divides with commerce organizations focused on free trade, and will likely create further disruptions in the ongoing trade negotiations between the Trump administration and Chinese president Xi Jinping.

Backing away from China-made infrastructure

U.S intelligence agencies have been backing away from China-made infrastructure for well over a decade, with companies like Huawei and ZTE facing bans and skepticism.

The companies on the new list aren’t as massive as Huawei, but they still are significant players in China’s technology growth and international expansion.

Most of the names on the list aren’t familiar in the U.S., with the exception of Hikvision, which made headlines in 2017 after reports revealed the company, substantially owned by the Chinese government, had equipment installed across sensitive locations in the U.S., including military bases and government facilities. In a statement, a Hikvision spokesperson told CNBC via email, “Hikvision, as the security industry’s global leader, respects human rights and takes our responsibility to protect people in the U.S. and the world seriously.”

Like Hikvision, another name on the list — Dahua Technology — is a large video surveillance and security camera company, with 35 global subsidiaries and a North America division.


Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe to our AI NAVIGATOR!


 

Other names on the new list represent other aspects of security and surveillance. They include:

  • IFLYTEK, a voice recognition company that recently raised $350 million to invest in artificial intelligence
  • Megvii Technology, a facial recognition tech “unicorn” that filed to go public in Hong Kong in August. Megvii had been valued at around $3.5 billion.
  • SenseTimem an artificial intelligence software-as-a-service platform with a valuation that recently passed $7.5 billion, with investment from backers including SoftBank
  • Meiya Picom a digital forensics company that holds nearly half the marketshare for computer investigation services products in China.
  • YITU, an A.I. research company that offers a wide-range of cloud-based facial recognition products.
  • Yixin Technology, also known as Ecguard, an information security that provides equipment for everything from burglar alarms to large event security, firefighting and public transportation surveillance. […]

Read more – www.cnbc.com