Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo says Donald Trump is a president-elect who for all of his aggressive talk is afraid to let America compete with the rest of the world, responding instead with tariffs and curtailing immigration.
President Joe Biden’s $52 billion bid to transform the domestic chip industry — one of the most ambitious pieces of US industrial policy since World War II — is about to enter a pivotal stage: life under a new administration.
President Joe Biden has signed an order to strengthen federal computer networks in the wake of damaging espionage intrusions by the Chinese government. The 53-page order issued Thursday builds on steps taken by the White House and federal agencies over the past four years to impose cybersecurity regulations on rail,
President Joe Biden has proposed a new framework to limit the export of advanced computer chips used to develop artificial intelligence.
Developers will be required to use clean power sources to fully meet the sky-high energy demands of several new data centers.
In these final actions of his presidency, Biden is asserting his domestic and foreign-policy principles before Trump takes charge.
The move comes 11 months after the Commerce Department launched an investigation into the national security risks from Chinese vehicle technology.
Biden's final foreign policy featured harsh rhetoric on China, as Washington embraces tough-on-China policies.
Some industries would not be impacted, because they are not crucial to national security, including supply chain activities and gaming chips.
President Joe Biden's outgoing administration is finalizing rules on Tuesday that will effectively bar nearly all Chinese cars and trucks from the U.S. market, as part of a crackdown on vehicle software and hardware from China.
President Joe Biden's outgoing administration plans to finalize rules next week cracking down on Chinese vehicle software and hardware, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told Reuters. In September,