AI, cloud companies among 50 China entities in US export blacklist
Companies from Taiwan, Iran, Pakistan, South Africa and United Arab Emirates also were included in the roughly 80 companies added to the "entity list" of the commerce department's Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS). Six are subsidiaries of the ...

Companies from Taiwan, Iran, Pakistan, South Africa and United Arab Emirates also were included in the roughly 80 companies added to the "entity list" of the commerce department's Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS). Six are subsidiaries of the Inspur Group, China's leading cloud computing and big data service provider which was listed in the US government's entity list in 2023.
The update also includes the Beijing Academy of Artificial Intelligence (BAAI), which objected vehemently. "We are shocked that a private non-profit scientific research institution has been added to the entity list. We strongly oppose this wrong decision without any factual basis and ask the relevant US departments to withdraw it," the institute said.
A review committee said the BAAI and a firm, Beijing Innovation Wisdom Technology Co, were judged to have developed large AI models and advanced computer chips for military purposes.
China's foreign ministry also lashed back, saying the entity list and other export controls were an abuse meant to "unjustly suppress Chinese enterprises." "It seriously violates international law and basic norms of international relations, severely damages the legitimate rights and interests of enterprises, and undermines the security and stability of global supply chains. China firmly opposes and strongly condemns this," ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said at a routine news briefing Wednesday.
To prevent weapons development
The companies on the list are subject to the "foreign direct product rule" of the BIS, which allows it to control reexports and transfers of foreign-made products containing technology that the US government deems vital for national security. The tightening of controls comes as the Trump administration prepares for another round of tariff hikes due next week, an escalation of the trade war that President Donald Trump launched during his first term in office.
Trump has already hiked tariffs on imports of Chinese goods to 20%. On Monday, he said he would slap a 25% tariff on all imports from nations that buy oil or gas from Venezuela. China buys a large share of the oil exported by Venezuela.
China has retaliated with its own countermeasures, including sweeping new duties on a variety of American goods and an anti-monopoly investigation into Google. It has also moved to tighten its own sanctions regime, meanwhile, with a law enabling it to freeze assets of companies subject to Chinese sanctions.
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