Trump and Xi face a test over AI control
Hi, this is Evelyn, writing to you from Beijing. Welcome to the latest edition of The China Connection — a succinct snapshot of what I’m seeing and hearing from local businesses.
Students and businesses alike are embracing AI in China, while the U.S. worries more about the negative impact. Will that encourage cooperation on AI safety when U.S. President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping meet?
The big story
A robotic voice warned me (and others) at a Hangzhou street intersection that a scooter driver didn’t have a helmet on — even though I saw the rider wearing one.
Regardless, the city and others are ploughing ahead in testing robot police officers. The national cybersecurity regulator on Friday published guidelines for ensuring safe use of agentic AI.
It’s a reminder that in the U.S.-China tech race, Beijing has underscored AI control from the start; the U.S. seems only now to be taking it seriously.
As comparisons to the Cold War nuclear threat grow, hopes are rising that Trump and Xi will talk about AI cooperation in Beijing this week.
Given concerns about the latest AI models, “we are willing … [to explore] channels of deconfliction,” senior U.S. officials told reporters in a briefing ahead of the planned summit.
The stakes are rising sharply.
U.S.-based Anthropic rolled out cyber-focused Mythos to select clients in the last few weeks, a model Chinese state media has noted for its “unprecedented capabilities in cyberattacks.” Meanwhile, the latest version of China’s open-sourced DeepSeek model has weaned itself further off U.S. chips.
The two countries could work on “a global treaty to regulate the use of AI in the military,” said Hai Zhao, a director of international political studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a state-affiliated think tank.
“If China [and the] U.S. get involved in an AI arms race, then it is bad not just for both countries,” he said, but for all humanity.
People cycle past one of 15 humanoid robot police officers deployed in Hangzhou, in China’s eastern Zhejiang province on May 3, 2026.
Agatha Cantrill | Afp | Getty Images
Governments, however, are typically followers rather than leaders of tech innovation. Education and research ecosystems remain the core drivers.
There, China is pulling ahead, under Beijing’s mandate to achieve an AI penetration rate of over 70% in key industries by next year.
Hangzhou’s Zhejiang University and Shanghai’s Jiao Tong University surpassed Harvard to take the top spots in a ranking of universities by scientific performance, according to the Netherlands’ Leiden University Ranking Traditional Edition.
And just as Silicon Valley has Stanford, many of China’s high-tech startups — including DeepSeek — have their roots in Zhejiang University. The school’s alumni association has released a list of 10 companies, such as quantum computing player Logistics Bits, which it says could be “the next DeepSeek.”
A divergent public
Rankings aside, there’s a striking…
Read More: Trump and Xi face a test over AI control