The least surprising chapter of the Manus story is what’s happening right now
and China are locked in an all-out race to build the most powerful AI on the planet.
Did anyone think there would not be a reckoning over this tie-up?
(Senator John Cornyn had thoughts, tweeting at the time, “Who thinks it is a good idea for American investors to subsidize our biggest adversary in AI, only to have the CCP use that technology to challenge us economically and militarily? Not me.
That, too, was surprising. It’s worth noting that Manus didn’t just sell itself to an American buyer; it spent the better part of last year actively trying to operate outside China’s orbit.
By every measure, Manus was trying to make itself a Singapore company. But if that string of events raised eyebrows in Washington, you can only imagine that in Beijing, they were apoplectic. China has a phrase for all of this: “selling young crops” — homegrown AI companies that move abroad and sell themselves to foreign buyers before they’ve fully matured, taking their intellectual property and talent with them. Beijing also hates it and has spent years establishing that no company operates outside its reach.
China then spent the next two years methodically dismantling its own booming tech sector, wiping out hundreds of billions in market value. Chinese leaders are many things, but subtle is not one of them.
No formal charges have been filed — just an inquiry into whether the Meta deal violated Beijing’s foreign investment rules.
Beijing is calling it a routine regulatory review.
At some point, someone at Manus probably thought they’d gotten away with it, and maybe they still will. But given the stakes of the AI race, that was always a big gamble.
Now Beijing wants answers; Manus’s founders are apparently not going anywhere until it gets them
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