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United States Science

The US Is Turning Away From Its Biggest Scientific Partner at a Precarious Time (wsj.com) 131

One of the most productive scientific collaborations of the 21st century is pulling apart, as deteriorating relations between the U.S. and China lead researchers to sever ties. From a report: The decoupling, which began in recent years with investigations into Chinese researchers in the U.S., has accelerated as tensions have risen between the superpowers. Now some U.S. lawmakers are pushing to let a landmark agreement to cooperate on science and technology, signed in 1979 and renewed routinely since, expire this month. China has built itself into a powerful engine of scientific discovery in recent decades, partly with American help, and many in Washington fear that China could gain a security and military advantage unless the U.S. takes decisive steps to cut off cooperation in scientific research.

Many scientists warn, however, that Washington would be severing ties as China is making its greatest contributions to scientific advancements, and cutting it off risks slowing American progress in critical areas such as biotechnology, clean energy and telecommunications. While the U.S. remains the world's pre-eminent science power, fundamental scientific research has grown borderless in the era of globalization, much as business has. More than 40% of America's scientific production -- measured by the number of high-quality papers that U.S.-based scientists produce -- involves cooperation with researchers abroad, according to Clarivate, a London-based data firm that tracks global scientific research. China and the U.S. are each other's No. 1 partner in producing scientific research, with collaborative research between the two consistently among the most-cited papers across fields, according to an analysis of Clarivate's data by Caroline Wagner, a professor of public policy at Ohio State University.

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The US Is Turning Away From Its Biggest Scientific Partner at a Precarious Time

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @12:46PM (#63772368)
    China [csis.org] is [cnn.com] asshoe [wsj.com].
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Don't trust the US government, either. The obvious fact is that cutting off collaboration will hurt Both the US and China severely.

      And would it even be worth it in the slightest to sacrifice innovations in critical areas of the economy for some temporary illusion of military advantage? This is a major failing of countries still acting as if they wish to dominate each other - when it is no longer possible; Military superiority doesn't exactly matter anymore - A few nukes, and both countries are extin

      • Military superiority doesn't exactly matter anymore - A few nukes, and both countries are extinct, and possibly the whole human race.. we reached that point almost 80 years ago.

        If this is true, then how is it that Ukraine is still resisting Russia's attempt to take it over?
        • by mysidia ( 191772 )

          If this is true, then how is it that Ukraine is still resisting Russia's attempt to take it over?

          In case you didn't notice... This is not an all-out war, and Ukraine is FAR from having military superiority over Russia -- Military superiority doesn't even grant victory. So that does not contradict the above at all.

          Russia's capabilities are superior.. and if Russia liked they could actually turn the whole country to a wasteland with some targeted WMDs; However, the consequences for Russia would be enorm

          • In case you didn't notice, I never said that Ukraine has military superiority over Russia. In fact, my question implies that they don't. Next time, try answering the question I asked, not the one you wish I'd asked.
      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The UK already made this mistake. Left the EU's Horizon programme for science, found that the promises given about matching funding were all lies, and anyway science doesn't care about borders or who you are allowed to collaborate with.

        Now the UK is crawling back, asking to be let in again.

        As for China, China has a lot of money to invest in science. And it's going to invest it regardless of if we collaborate or not. In fact, not collaborating might make it invest more.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Like the US gov't doesn't spy?

      However, one difference is that the Chinese gov't assists in NON-military industrial espionage. I won't say it never happened, but it's rare the US has done such to anyone's knowledge.

  • The question is... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by kwelch007 ( 197081 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @12:50PM (#63772380) Homepage

    The question is not whether the U.S. and China will lose something because of lesser cooperation. The question is, which side is losing more over this?

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:14PM (#63772438)

      The question is, which side is losing more over this?

      Arguably, America is losing more.

      In the West, research results are published openly. So the Chinese can still read the journals and learn.

      In China, research is less open. If you're not on the inside, you don't see it.

      • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

        by microbox ( 704317 )
        But China does "research", where everything happens at the behest, and for the glory of, the CCP.
        • by Cpt_Kirks ( 37296 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @02:12PM (#63772624)

          Also, Chinese "research" is quite often questionable in quality....and honesty.

          • Oh, I dunno if that's always the case. Covid worked well enough.

          • by mjwx ( 966435 )

            Also, Chinese "research" is quite often questionable in quality....and honesty.

            Yep, they tried for years to replicate technological developments in the west and found out the only way they could do it was buying parts wholesale and then trying to assemble them locally. Their high speed trains are German, bought in kit form and assembled locally. Their airliners are basically western airliners, Honewell, Thales, GE, SAFRAN, bought from the west, assembled into a poor mans B737/A320.

            Of course involved in various industrial espionage incidents however they still cant replicate it. At

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No, that's not remotely what's at issue here. Access to scientific publications isn't the threat. The threat is theft of proprietary technology, the designs and implementations that are built on those papers - that's what they're stealing.

        And in this area it's definitely China that stands to lose more; there's a good reason so much Chinese shit just looks like clones of Western tech, i.e. why the front of China's J-20 is the spitting image of the F-35 - because it IS the fucking F-35's nose.

        No one gives a f

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        American research (and European) is often locked behind paywalls. SciHub exists because that is true.

        The Chinese publish their research in journals too. Subscription journals, the same as the West.

        Often they publish in Chinese too, which means a lot of research is inaccessible to non-Chinese speakers. Not just inaccessible, it is completely invisible to them. Without an English translation, they don't even know that it exists.

        Centuries ago research was published in Latin, used as a common language among Eur

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by kamapuaa ( 555446 )

      Not everything is a battle. The whole idea of working together is to increase the common good for both China and the US. Ending cooperation or having a trade war means we both lose.

      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by microbox ( 704317 )
        The CCP has been fighting that battle for 50+ years. Until recently, it has been almost completely one-sided. Since COVID, the world has finally been waking up to the hostile cultish duplicity of China's leadership.
      • no, it doesn't, we get nothing from China other than cheap goods.
        • no, it doesn't, we get nothing from China other than cheap goods.

          One of the most interesting things about the "poor downtrodden Chinese workers" meme is that if they were not working for the low wages, they's still be subsistence farming.

          Yes, the US buys a lot od inexpensice Chinese goods. But if we insisted that they be paid the same as western workers, we would have no impetus to buy anything from them, so they wouldn't have the impetus to make the cheaper goods, so they probably wouldn't.

          I have always thought that the endgame rationale of third world nations was

          • I look at labor unions and see a whole lot that claim to be international, but they don't seem to act like it.
      • Doing business with China is promotion of slavery and pollution. We not only can do without that, we cannot continue doing that.

      • by jonadab ( 583620 )
        > The whole idea of working together is to increase the common good for both China and the US

        That was the theory, yes.

        In theory there shouldn't be much difference between theory and practice, but in practice there often is.

        > Ending cooperation or having a trade war means we both lose.

        We only lose whatever we were getting out of the relationship in the first place, almost all of which was negative. We have been putting up with an enormous quantity of horrific behavior and abuse on the theory, original
      • by jythie ( 914043 )
        Yeah, but there is a lot of power to be gained by creating an image of being a warrior. The battle has less to do with US interests, and everything to do with people building personal brands for either punditry or election.
      • Not really. The idea was that we would influence China and foster the growth of a middle class that would demand more and more liberty until the CCP collapsed. Unfortunately, it seems to have been working more in the other direction.

        There is normally a powerful direct relationship between trade and democratization. For whatever reason, it appears that relationship is broken when it comes to China. That might not actually be the case, the CCP is pretty good at controlling public information and may be

    • by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:23PM (#63772460)

      I work in research in EU. The collaboration with research groups from China and Chinese nationals who are at professor level has been less beneficial to us. They like to invite students at their initial study level (e.g. Masters of science or during PhD), learn something with us, maybe publish a paper, then go back to China and create whatever research and industry ventures now with improved knowledge acquired from us and at our cost. For these particular collaborations I know about, China has profited from our knowledge much more than us. When these groups are also lead by a Chinese principal investigator who emigrated in the West, we profit basically zero. They have a large chance to mostly hire Chinese nationals (understandable, cultural proximity) who come and leave, and when the Chinese leader finds a good professor position in China then we are left with nothing, the only who have profited are the students who made a research stay in EU at our taxpayer cost, then went back to China to contribute to products that compete with ours.

      There are areas of research such as the humanities, or archaeology / palaeontology where there is no palatable profit and it makes little sense to cut ties with China or the in the past the Soviets, but for technological areas we must consider carefully which areas we should not give economical or technological rivals an access to our hard-earned knowledge and experience.

      On another note, Chinese nationals who come after PhD and stay many years, contribute to our research and IP. I'm fine with them and it is not what is being discussed here.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The obvious questions are:

        - Why aren't any useful ideas patented? Chinese courts enforce Western patents, and even if they didn't those products wouldn't be exportable to any country that does.

        - Why weren't the ideas exploited in Europe?

        Companies I have worked for that worked with Chinese people did those things, and it wasn't a problem. In one case there was a Chinese product with similar functionality to one of ours, but there were also European and Israeli ones within a few years as everyone found ways t

        • For certain things, trained people are more relevant than patents. Clever people find ways around patents, in particular when the patent was their original idea.

          Patents and scientific papers don't include all the details, even if involuntarily. You only know to repeat something if you have worked with the people who invented it, otherwise you're 2 years late trying to optimize parameters.

          Research institutions are entirely dependent on researchers and academics to figure out what in their work and in their m

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Academics don't usually write patents. They employ a patent writer to do it for them.

            You link for justice in various countries is interesting. Since this is civil law we are talking about, let's do a like-for-like comparison of civil law related stuff from your own link:

            Regulatory enforcement: China 0.48, United States 0.54, difference -0.06.
            Civil justice: China 0.51, United States 0.54, difference -0.03.

            They don't cover the EU as a whole, but picking the UK because it's where I'm from, they score 0.70 in b

            • Academics don't usually write patents. They employ a patent writer to do it for them.

              Downsides are: 1. the university takes the submission/consultancy fee from the academic's research funds; 2. working on a patent means the academic cannot publish scientific papers or show results in a conference until the patent is submitted, and in case of possible follow-up patents for different variations or applications, then you cannot publish anything for another 18 months after the submission of the first patent (18 months is the time for a final decision to be reached on the first one, during which

    • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:35PM (#63772510) Journal
      Both sides lose when cooperation ends. Both sides lose when mutual-trade ends. The policy makers in Washington know that, but it isn't the question they are trying to answer. The question Washington people are trying to answer is, "Can China's military growth be slowed enough so they won't start world war 3?"

      The main goal in Washington right now is to give other countries (like India and southeast Asia) a chance to grow in science and economy so that China is just one player among many. They believe that stopping cooperation with China will encourage cooperation with other places, even if it's more painful for America in the short term.
      • What specifically would the US research world lose from cutting off ties with China?
        What discoveries or inventions have they come up with that we benefitted from vs the opposite?

        • The article mentions, as an example, benefits in recognizing the toxic levels of various microparticals. It's an area where you need to test a lot of particles, and having a well funded lab and testing a bunch of particles is something China does well.
          • Emitting a bunch of toxic particles is something China does well. They're even better at it than we are, and that's saying something.

          • They also have a lot of pollution. Unfortunately they also have reasons to lie about the results. They want us to eviscerate our industrial and energy capacities, and their policymakers don't seem to be paying the research findings much heed.

            It's also worth noting that at the core of their governing philosophy is the belief that will alone can reshape reality. That what they say is true is what the truth will be. The Soviets and Nazis suffered the same delusion. It seems to be a necessary article of

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by avandesande ( 143899 )
          Funding gain of function labs in China has been very profitable for US pharmaceutical companies.
      • by jonadab ( 583620 )
        > Both sides lose when cooperation ends. Both sides lose when mutual-trade ends.

        Frankly, we are better off without the CCP's "win-win" "mutual" "cooperation". What it means is you give them whatever they want, they don't do anything they don't want to do or give you anything they don't want to give you, they can alter the deal at any time, and you are not allowed to complain about it. Pray they don't alter it any further.
    • by Whateverthisis ( 7004192 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @02:18PM (#63772642)
      Illumina, the leader in Next Gen Sequencing, collaborated with BGI who then turned around, copied their technology [illumina.com] and competed with them.

      Westinghouse Electric collaborated with China State Power Investment Corp on Gen 3+ nuclear reactors, who then turned around and sold an exact copy of the AP-1000 [wikipedia.org], but bigger. They didn't even bother to change the name, the CAP-1400 [world-nuclear-news.org].

      And the latest Chinese fighter, the J-20, is clearly using appropriated technology [theaviationist.com] from the US defense industry.

      So given how far they've come with collaborating with the US, what has the US gotten out of it? Cheap manufacturing labor at volume, but I can't see a single product on the market today that utilizes some technology developed in China. And that cheap labor compartively isn't as cheap [statista.com] nor as productive.

      So China has a lot more to lose in terms of new technology because they've spent the last decades copying to catch up but not innovating. Whereas the US is looking more and more like it has more to lose by maintaining it's relationship with China.

    • by jythie ( 914043 )
      The question is right, but the players are not. China is, essentially, the ball in this game. What we should really be looking at are the factions within the US who will benefit or suffer from shared research vs isolationism. Different groups and industries within the US have very differnt stakes and are seeking very differnt outcomes. It is also useful to examine how their goals align with what benefits the general population... which groups depend on affluent customers vs cheap labor for instance.

      W
      • If you only want to analyze the decision-making process in the US instead of the rather more significant matter of whether or not China intends to use the results of cooperation to kill us, sure.
  • When China (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wakeboarder ( 2695839 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @12:54PM (#63772394)
    decides to take over Taiwan, we won't be sorry we had an conscious uncoupling from china.
    • Re:When China (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Austerity Empowers ( 669817 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:23PM (#63772458)

      We're already not sorry. It can be a profitable arrangement, but not at all costs.

    • Re:When China (Score:5, Interesting)

      by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @02:14PM (#63772630) Journal

      Exactly this - for all the posts about the value of cooperation with China being mutually beneficial they ignore China's clear ambition to over take us as the worlds super power, call it whatever you want an uber power etc.

      Even if they are not looking to be colonialist, they ARE looking to be the shot caller. This about preservation of western culture and western values - not short term economic growth!

      Regardless who is gaining more in terms of papers published or widget counts, or dollars - the reality is China is gaining things that it was unable to culturally produce for itself for at any time in modern history without western partners, and its child aged even by American standards communist regime has also shown little ability to create organically but lots of ability to hover up from abroad.

      The mean to dominate and every dollar investment, every bit of information shared makes them a stronger and deadlier foe.

      The other bit of it is the research they are doing is progressing faster because they are doing things that would not fly here. COVID probably a lab leak, happened in China because nobody says anything there, where as here someone would have blown the whistle and said hey these practices are unsafe, and this gain of function research is illegal to do with federal funds. Hopefully the lawsuit against EcoHealth Alliance proceeds and is successful - they SHOULD be held responsible for COVID deaths, for working with China on the research.

      • "Even if they are not looking to be colonialist"

        They are. See: Tibet.

        Wow, the dictionary for the Google keyboard doesn't appear to have Tibet in it...

      • Exactly this - for all the posts about the value of cooperation with China being mutually beneficial they ignore China's clear ambition to over take us as the worlds super power, call it whatever you want an uber power etc.

        Probably, though they're unlikely to enjoy the global power the US did after the fall of the USSR.

        Even if they are not looking to be colonialist, they ARE looking to be the shot caller.

        Unlikely. China's biggest leverage is sheer population, but the West (North America + Europe + Australia) is close, if not bigger. And still far richer.

        We may get to a point where China is the single biggest power, but they don't have much in the way of natural allies the way Western nations do.

        This about preservation of western culture and western values - not short term economic growth!

        I'm not sure where you get this from. Centuries of European dominance didn't destroy Chinese culture and values, why d

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      decides to take over Taiwan, we won't be sorry we had an conscious uncoupling from china.

      China have been sabre-rattling over Taiwan for decades, absolutely nothing has come of it. They're being especially timid now as Ukraine has shown Russia to be a paper tiger... and the terrain should favour Russia having a land border and it being excellent tank country.

      Taiwan is an island with a modern, highly trained and motivated military rather than just some farmers/factory workers with a few days training on an NLAW.

      China talks a lot about Taiwan but has never done anything. As long as they cont

  • by Brett Buck ( 811747 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:22PM (#63772452)

    TFA (and the text of TFS) is absolutely classic psychological ops, warning about the dangers of lack of cooperation - intended to ensure that the nearly unidirectional flow of information keeps going.

    The Chinese Communist Party, which 100% owns and operates the Chinese scientific community, is nearly 100% evil, with the same goals as they have had since 1949 - domination by Marxist totalitarian rule. Charmain Mao is dead, and they are using different tactics than before (to appeal to the willing dupes in the West so they can get more cooperation), but the goal is the same.

    If a scientist is "cooperating" with the West, you can be sure that they are operating as de facto shills for the party, because if they weren't, they would have no contact and you would never have heard from them.

    China lies, steals, cheats, bullies to get the maximum return for their own purposes. Calls for "peaceful" cooperation are just a tactic to weasel more stuff to steal. We could very easily get along without them, they could not get along without us.

    • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

      Yep.

      Hiring people from China for your industrial, academic, etc. ventures is akin to hiring an espionage spy from your direct competition.

  • LOL @ "Partner"... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Marful ( 861873 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:27PM (#63772470)
    Partner implies that both parties bring equal effort and resources to the table. In this case one gives, the other takes, and the corporate CEO's and bureaucrats get richer at the expense of the giver's nation populace.
    • by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @02:17PM (#63772640) Journal

      Partner implies that both parties bring equal effort and resources to the table. In this case one gives, the other takes, and the corporate CEO's and bureaucrats get richer at the expense of the giver's nation populace.

      Years ago, I read a business book by Joe Studwell called The China Dream [amazon.com], basically a history of Western attempts to make money in China and how it usually ends badly for Western "partners". McDonnell-Douglas, in particular, signed a deal to build MD-8X airliners in China with the understanding that the Chinese would buy a bunch and help market them to Asian partners.

      China bought two. Two.

      McDonnell-Douglas ended up in financial trouble with nothing but red ink to show for their huge Chinese venture, China got the factory and the tooling, and today China builds a "completely domestically designed" airliner called the ARJ21 that just happens to look like a near-carbon copy of the MD-8X [avgeekery.com]. What are the odds, eh?

      In my own case, I used to have an Isuzu Rodeo. When I went looking for parts, one of the stories I came across was that China was building an unauthorized copy of the Rodeo so close to the Isuzu design that most of the parts were interchangeable. Isuzu never authorized the production, nor saw a single dime from it.

      Basically, anyone going to do business with China for all but the cheapest trinkets is going lose money, Intellectual Property, and be robbed by their own "partners".

      • anyone going to do business with China for all but the cheapest trinkets is going lose money, Intellectual Property, and be robbed by their own "partners".

        Happens with cheap trinkets too. I knew a guy who lost his shirt having a vape kit made in China, shock amazement they turned around and sold it cheaper to end users than they would sell it to him.

  • by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @01:37PM (#63772516)

    Yes, such a good partner that they'll happily host dangerous biological research laboratories which have been banned in the US, then host US researchers working closely with those partners to develop novel biological pathogens and vaccine precursors, such as SARS-CoV-2. And to help out even more, they'll even keep investigators out for two years and burn all the documents! Just requires a compatible government on the US-side and the whole thing can be brushed under the rug.

    • by CAIMLAS ( 41445 )

      You mean it wasn't brushed under the rug in the US? I'm not sure we're paying attention to the same news... but there's been an almost-dismissive attitude towards any Chinese-basis for Covid that I've seen.

      • The role of the US's funding, NIH, Peter Daszack of the EcoHealth Alliance, and the FOIA'd documents like Project Defuse have definitely been swept under the rug here. It's acceptable to have a vague level of distrust towards China but no one is informed about the specifics of what's public record so far.

  • China is not in any way, shape or form relevant to science. In fact, never working with China again will probably be a very good thing for the quality of America's research output. Not the quantity, because producing a boatload of worthless publications has been the one strength of Chinese "research" for a long time, but the quality of scientific output can only benefit from having no connection to China whatsoever (speaking from extensive experience...).

    • Even science itself isn't relevant to science due to this whole reproducibility crisis. Doesn't matter from which country particular shoveled science nonsense comes.
  • ...stop Chinese scientists from their work
    It will just hinder our benefit from it

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Can you name some specific benefits the US has had from Chinese work?

      Maybe you meant gain of function virus research?

      • You mean that iPhone in your hand, the keyboard you are typing on, the monitor, the motherboard, the lights, the paint, and everything you have been using? All Chinese imports.

        • You mean that iPhone in your hand, the keyboard you are typing on, the monitor, the motherboard, the lights, the paint, and everything you have been using? All Chinese imports.

          Literally none of the technology for any of that stuff was developed in China. We're talking about the technology, not the goods, which can be manufactured in numerous locations.

  • They're the biggest commercial IP thieves in the entire world. They lie to their people, pollute their own land, and want to take over the entire world. They're currently slightly more dangerous than Hitler way. What the tap dancing hell do they mean scientific partners? What communist propaganda bot wrote this trash?
  • Didn't read TFS but no way is this going to work. There's a reason science is practised by scientists and politicians stick to that which appears to offer status/control.

    No way will the people really directing the future of our species allow the foolishness of those 'in charge' to impact them.

    One way or another collaborative science will happen.

  • Most of US colleges, the only way they make it is Chinese students. The state of China is what keeps the entire US academic sector going, be it public schools where their engineering divisions are almost all Chinese citizens, or even private schools. If China is kicked out, that entire sector of the US will collapse.

    Just remember, China educates their citizens for free.

    • by sfcat ( 872532 )
      The US education system needs a serious overhaul right now. But the claim that the US education system will collapse without China is beyond absurd. I assure you, the US can get along fine without China. The other way around, not so much. China imports 80% of its food and fuel. Those trade route are protected by the US navy, not the Chinese navy. And the Chinese Navy can't even sail the entire distance of those trade routes they need to protect. The idea that the US depends on China in any real way i
    • will unlimited loans they can keep in the black!

  • by LazarusQLong ( 5486838 ) on Wednesday August 16, 2023 @02:35PM (#63772698)
    My experience with Chinese professors has it that they can NOT be trusted. even without being run by spy masters, they will act as sleepers and bring back data to China after 40 or more years. I have interviewed chinese who have literally said that their goals are to come to the west and steal as much as possible so that when the Middle Kingdom decides to take control, it will be ready... seriously.
  • Navigating uncertain paths. Collaboration's value cannot be underestimated, especially in critical scientific junctures. Hope for renewed partnerships in the greater pursuit of knowledge.
  • We just need AI to summarize and compare reality to claims. No, you're not a free market if...

    Imagine what a world might look like if "your privacy" wasn't an excuse to lie to each other.

  • by HnT ( 306652 )

    China is not a trustworthy, reliable partner to cooperate with.
    Neither is RuSSia.
    Neither are other warlords the world over.

  • the U.S.-China Agreement on Cooperation in Science and Technology (S&T Agreement) signed in 1979 by then-president Jimmy Carter was the #1 instrument by which the American middle class, over the 50 years that have followed, would be sold out to the wealthiest investors. It enabled the transfer of all manner of American science and tech (much of which had been developed in the US at taxpayer expense, thanks to military and NASA projects that required new tech and were funded by taxpayers) to China. Thi

  • I imagine a look at the surnames would tell you whether America is as insular as this scare story suggests...
  • Our system of protection for intellectual property isn't working. The patent system is intended to allow people to publicly disclose innovations for the public good. Unfortunately in the international arena with many bad actors, there is little protection, and in the domestic arena is really only something that primarily benefits lawyers employed by multinational corporations.

    Scientific discovery is expensive and if the people who implement don't share capital with the innovators, it doesn't promote disco
  • Love the Wall Street Journal articles that are paywalled.

    The slashdot summary said

    More than 40% of America's scientific production -- measured by the number of high-quality papers that U.S.-based scientists produce -- involves cooperation with researchers abroad, according to Clarivate, a London-based data firm that tracks global scientific research. China and the U.S. are each other's No. 1 partner in producing scientific research, with collaborative research between the two consistently among the most-cited papers across fields, according to an analysis of Clarivate's data by Caroline Wagner, a professor of public policy at Ohio State University.

    That 40% claim seems dubious at first glance. It's definitely not true in my field of computer systems research, where Chinese submissions and acceptance are usually both quite low relative to papers from the US and Europe. Co-authorship is even lower. Yes, there is quite a bit of co-authorship with Chinese working in the US and Europe, but much less so with Chinese in China.

    The top universities in China do get papers acce

  • That is a new synonym for thief.
  • China is not, has never been, and will never be a superpower. China's entire economy is about to collapse in the next couple of decades.

  • Not to mention TFA. China's plan has been institutionalized stealing of US inventions, full stop, end of fucking story.

You know, the difference between this company and the Titanic is that the Titanic had paying customers.

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