The US-China rivalry has long been cast as a contest between two superpowers, with one rising and the other defending its primacy. This competition has been largely measured in GDP growth, military spending and the number of aircraft carriers and alliances each side could marshal. The central criteria is “who holds power” or “who has more power”. Yet today, the rivalry can no longer be understood by these conventional metrics. Rather, it is taking place within a complex web of technology,…
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