News Grower

Independent coverage of AI, startups, and technology.

Ars Technica Apr 23, 2026 at 21:45 Big Tech Rising Hot

US accuses China of “industrial-scale” AI theft. China says it’s “slander.”

Trump-Xi summit may be rocked by US mulling huge sanctions.

Signal weather

Rising

Momentum is building quickly, so this card is a good early entry point into the topic.

By Ashley Belanger Original source
US accuses China of “industrial-scale” AI theft. China says it’s “slander.”

The US is preparing to crack down on China's allegedly "industrial-scale theft of American artificial intelligence labs’ intellectual property," the Financial Times reported Thursday. Since the launch of DeepSeek—a Chinese model that OpenAI claimed was trained using outputs from its models—other AI firms have accused global rivals of using a method called distillation to steal their IP. In January, Google claimed that "commercially motivated" actors not limited to China attempted to clone its Gemini AI chatbot by promoting the model more than 100,000 times in bids to train cheaper copycats. The next month, Anthropic accused Chinese firms DeepSeek, Moonshot, and MiniMax of using the same tactic to generate "over 16 million exchanges with Claude through approximately 24,000 fraudulent accounts." Also in February, OpenAI confirmed that most attacks it saw originated from China. For the US, these distillation attacks supposedly threaten to help China quickly catch up in the AI race. In a memo that FT reviewed, the director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, Michael Kratsios, warned that "the US government has information indicating that foreign entities, principally based in China, are engaged in deliberate, industrial-scale campaigns to distill US frontier AI systems."Read full article Comments

Stay on the signal

Follow US accuses China of “industrial-scale” AI theft. China says it’s “slander.”

Follow this story beyond a single article: new follow-ups, adjacent sources, and the evolving storyline.

We send a confirmation link first, then only meaningful digests.

Story map

Understand this topic fast

A quick entry into the story: why it matters now, who is involved, and where to go next for context.

Why it matters now

Fresh coverage with immediate momentum.
There are already 6 connected articles in the same storyline to continue from here.
The story keeps orbiting around Accuses, Ars Technica, and China, so the entity pages are the fastest way to build context.
Ars Technica already has 4 follow-up stories on the same theme.

Topic constellation

Open the live map for this story

See which entities, story threads, sources, and follow-up articles shape this story right now.

Click nodes to continue

Entity Cluster Article Hub Source

Story timeline

Continue with this story

A short sequence of events and follow-up stories to understand the arc quickly.

Apr 23, 2026 at 22:14 Ars Technica

Visitors to this private space station won't be wearing shorts and T-shirts

Can you wear white after Labor Day if your destination is Earth orbit?

Apr 23, 2026 at 21:45 Ars Technica

US accuses China of “industrial-scale” AI theft. China says it’s “slander.”

Trump-Xi summit may be rocked by US mulling huge sanctions.

Apr 23, 2026 at 21:22 Ars Technica

Carbon nanotube wiring gets closer to competing with copper

While this material degrades over time, it could point to better ones.

Apr 23, 2026 at 20:57 Ars Technica

We still don't have a more precise value for "Big G"

Such experiments bring "order to the universe, whether or not the number agrees with the expected value.”

Apr 23, 2026 at 20:41 Ars Technica

In a first, a ransomware family is confirmed to be quantum-safe

Technically speaking, there's no practical benefit to use PQC. So why is it being used?

Apr 23, 2026 at 18:05 Ars Technica

RFK Jr.’s rejection of germ theory debunked in Senate hearing

Kennedy falsely argues that vaccines did little to lower childhood deaths.

How reliable this looks

Signal and trust for Ars Technica

This source works at a rapid pace: 100% of recent stories land in the hot window, and 0% carry visible search signal.

Trusted

Reliability

92

Freshness

100

Sources in storyline

1

Related articles

More stories that share tags, source, or category context.

More from Ars Technica

Fresh reporting and follow-up coverage from the same newsroom.

Open source page