November 21, 2025
Tensions between the USA and China are weighing on the Internet summit in Lisbon

Tensions between the USA and China are weighing on the Internet summit in Lisbon

This year's Web Summit highlights a kaleidoscope of startups from around the world (PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA)
This year’s Web Summit highlights a kaleidoscope of startups from around the world (PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA)

Global technology leaders were at the annual Web Summit in Lisbon on Tuesday to talk artificial intelligence, robots and startups – all in the shadow of global tensions over cutting-edge hardware and software and the resources needed to develop them.

Visitors with lanyards explored bright blue and pink booths under a gray November sky in search of the latest developments in quantum computing or humanoid robots.

According to the organizers, the “Davos for Geeks” will welcome over 70,000 visitors from 150 countries over four days, including 2,500 startups and 1,000 investors.

Microsoft made waves on Tuesday by announcing a $10 billion AI data center it will build in Portugal with British firm Nscale.

In a statement, the company called the program “one of the largest investments in AI computing capacity in Europe.”

“Demand has become pretty crazy in the AI ​​space, particularly in the last five months,” Daniel Bathurst, Nscale’s chief product officer, told AFP.

– China in mind –

China’s rise to technology dominance concerns many participants.

“Half of the world’s computer scientists and computer engineers who are at the forefront of these technologies are in China,” Rev Lebaredian, vice president of simulation technology at Nvidia, told AFP.

The American chip giant’s chief executive Jensen Huang warned earlier this month that China will “win” the race to master next-generation artificial intelligence.

He expects this to happen despite the fact that Nvidia’s most advanced chips – used to train and power AI systems – are unavailable in China due to export restrictions.

“If we try to exclude them, they will find a way to develop the same things,” Lebaredian said.

“We will lose the opportunity to work with them and benefit from their work.”

Web Summit founder Paddy Cosgrave told attendees at Monday’s opening event that “this year, more than any year before, it is clear that the era of Western tech dominance is coming to an end.”

– Robots and autonomous cars –

Leading Chinese manufacturer Unitree held demonstrations of its humanoid robots on Monday.

And a few meters away, Chinese 3D printer maker Bambulab was at its stand showing machines capable of producing physical objects in a matter of hours – itself designed based on text input to a generative AI model, rather than traditional software tools.

Such uses illustrate a transition of AI from “pure software, abstract games, into … the physical world,” Lebaredian said.

The US speakers on site include Amazon Robotics boss Tye Brady and Robert Playter from Boston Dynamics.

Uber’s chief operating officer, Andrew McDonald, mused on stage about a “transition from a labor-dominated industry… to a completely robot-dominated industry” as the company prepares to work with Nvidia to develop self-driving cars.

Waymo, a subsidiary of Google parent Alphabet, has announced that its self-driving vehicles will arrive in London next year. And several Chinese manufacturers, including Baidu and Pony.ai, are eyeing Europe for automated car rollouts.

– AI and chips –

The battle for dominance is likely to be fiercest in generative artificial intelligence.

Tuesday’s speaker, Cristiano Amon, head of American chip developer Qualcomm, announced that AI chips will compete against industry heavyweight Nvidia and challenger AMD.

He spoke of future phones as “just a big processor running AI.”

Monday’s opening night featured Swedish AI company Lovable, one of several companies that allow users to build apps and websites via a chatbot without any coding knowledge.

“We see 100,000 new products based on Lovable every day,” CEO Anton Osika told participants.

– Technological sovereignty –

In technology, “competition has intensified and is really tough,” European Commission digital chief Henna Virkkunen told attendees, as the 27-nation EU increasingly fears for its technological sovereignty amid rising trade and political tensions.

She highlighted 8,000 EU startups working in AI and called for a Buy European rule in public procurement. She said it was “important that we are not dependent on one country or one company for critical technologies.”

As the commission pressures American and Chinese platforms to tighten measures for underage internet users, American games maker Roblox – whose gaming platform is popular with minors – will outline how it plans to verify players’ ages.

dax/tgb/rl

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