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Neural Foundry's avatar

This historical framing is spot on. The pattern from Latin American oil nationalization to EU digital sovereignty shows how economic nationalism always cloaks itself in loftier language. What dunno if people realize is that when nations attack US tech under sovereignty pretexts, they're basically handing China a competitive advatnage since Beijing doesn't play by the same rules. The keiretsu comparison to today's digital markets is particualrly sharp.

Serge Tolkachev's avatar

As silly as the "sovereignty parade" may seem today, unfortunately, it is inevitable from the perspective of the theory of long-term technological development. The new industrial revolution (number 4 according to Klaus Schwab) is occurring simultaneously with the loss of the United States' undisputed global technological leadership. China's rise is as inevitable today as the United States' rise 130 years ago and the United Kingdom's retreat. The global technological matrix has ceased to be unipolar. China is ripe for the formation of its own technological zone. This process is disconcerting other countries, which are reacting to technological multipolarity and the accompanying rise in mistrust with a desire to acquire their own technological "sovereignty." I believe this period will last another 30 years, during which the world should return to a state of technological unipolarity led by...?

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