In a recent interview with Lex Fridman, NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang talked about the future of AI, and one standout point was China. He said China will continue to be a serious AI innovator, in large part because much of its AI development is open-source and experimental.
This matters because the AI race isn’t just about having the biggest models or the most expensive chips. It’s also about who can iterate fastest, share tools widely, and get useful AI into the hands of developers and companies. Open-source AI can be a major advantage in this regard.
China’s AI growth is also about scale: a huge pool of engineering talent, strong commercial demand, and a growing ecosystem of real-world AI applications. This doesn’t mean China will automatically “win” the AI race, but it does suggest the future of AI will be more global, more competitive, and less dominated by a few Western firms than many expected.
The key takeaway: the future of AI belongs not just to the companies with the biggest models, but to the ecosystems that innovate fastest and spread the furthest.
With continuous innovation coming out of China, how will the global AI landscape look in 5–10 years?
I am an attorney in the Washington DC area, with a Doctor of Law in the US, attended the master program at the National School of Administration of Việt Nam, and graduated from Sài Gòn University Law School. I aso studied philosophy at the School of Letters in Sài Gòn.
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I have worked as an anti-trust attorney for Federal Trade Commission and a litigator for a fortune-100 telecom company in Washington DC.
I have taught law courses for legal professionals in Việt Nam and still counsel VN government agencies on legal matters.
I have founded and managed businesses for me and my family, both law and non-law.
I have published many articles on national newspapers and radio stations in Việt Nam.
In 1989 I was one of the founding members of US-VN Trade Council, working to re-establish US-VN relationship.
Since the early 90's, I have established and managed VNFORUM and VNBIZ forum on VN-related matters; these forums are the subject of a PhD thesis by Dr. Caroline Valverde at UC-Berkeley and her book Transnationalizing Viet Nam.
I translate poetry and my translation of "A Request at Đồng Lộc Cemetery" is now engraved on a stone memorial at Đồng Lộc National Shrine in VN.
I study and teach the Bible and Buddhism. In 2009 I founded and still manage dotchuoinon.com on positive thinking and two other blogs on Buddhism.
In 2015 a group of friends and I founded website CVD - Conversations on Vietnam Development (cvdvn.net).
I study the art of leadership with many friends who are religious, business and government leaders from many countries.
I have written these books, published by Phu Nu Publishing House in Hanoi:
"Positive Thinking to Change Your Life", in Vietnamese (TƯ DUY TÍCH CỰC Thay Đổi Cuộc Sống) (Oct. 2011)
"10 Core Values for Success" (10 Giá trị cốt lõi của thành công) (Dec. 2013)
"Live a Life Worth Living" (Sống Một Cuộc Đời Đáng Sống) (Oct. 2023)
I practice Jiu Jitsu and Tai Chi for health, and play guitar as a hobby, usually accompanying my wife Trần Lê Túy Phượng, aka singer Linh Phượng.
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