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A Made In Canada label is shown in Brampton, Canada, on February 3, 2025. Sweeping tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump on many Canadian products, including dairy, force many Canadians to check labels for Canadian-made or produced products as a response to potential higher grocery costs. (Photo by Mike Campbell/NurPhoto)NO USE FRANCE

Tariffs were postponed. For a day. Now they’re back. For now.

After a short break, President Donald Trumpannounced Thursday that tariffs for Canada and Mexico are back on for March 4, along with an additional 10% tariff for China. That’s the plan as of right now, but things could change, as we’ve seen in recent days. On Wednesday, Donald Trump postponed across-the-board 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico until April 2. That pause came shortly after Trump said the tariffs were, in fact, going ahead on March 4 – and after he paused them for 30 days last month. The White House also said steel and aluminum tariffs are still planned for March 12, as well as retaliatory tariffs in early April. Is that clear ... as mud?

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Prime Minister of the Cook Islands Mark Brown, seen here at the White House in Washington, in 2023.

REUTERS/Leah Millis

China cooks up trouble in the South Pacific

The Cook Islands’ recent entry into a strategic partnership with China has spawned protests in front of Parliament, angered long-time ally New Zealand, and this week, nearly toppled the islands’ government.

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Security cameras representing surveillance.

Photo by Lianhao Qu on Unsplash

OpenAI digs up a Chinese surveillance tool

On Friday, OpenAI announced that it had uncovered a Chinese AI surveillance tool. The tool, which OpenAI called Peer Review, was developed to gather real-time data on anti-Chinese posts on social media.

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A Chinese People's Liberation Army Navy Harbin Z-9 helicopter sits on CNS Yulin during a display of warships ahead of an exhibition at Changi Naval Base in Singapore on May 18, 2015.

REUTERS/Edgar Su

China’s “dangerous” helicopter maneuver escalates tensions with US and Philippines

A Chinese naval helicopter flew nearly 10 feet from a Philippine patrol plane on Tuesday over a contested reef in the South China Sea, escalating tensions with Manila and Washington in the airspace over international waterways Beijing claims as its own.

The move, which the US condemned as a “dangerous maneuver,” comes months after a series of seaborne attacks in which Chinese coast guard vessels rammed Philippine ships.

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- YouTube

The growing cyber threat: Ransomware, China, and state-sponsored attacks

"Ransomware attacks surged 252% last year—hospitals, schools, and local governments are paying the price," said Brad Smith, Microsoft vice chair and president, during a Global Stage discussion at the 2025 Munich Security Conference.

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In this photo illustration, a DeepSeek logo is seen displayed on a smartphone with a South Korea Flag in the background.

Avishek Das/SOPA Images via Reuters Connect

South Korea halts downloads of DeepSeek

On Monday, the South Korean government became the latest to ban downloads of DeepSeek — at least until further notice. The Chinese AI company’s apps, at the time of writing, were unavailable for download in Apple and Google’s mobile app marketplaces, though its website was still accessible.
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Taiwan's flag with a semiconductor.

Paige Fusco

Has US opened the door to Taiwanese independence?

The US State Department last week scrubbed a statement from its website that said it doesn’t support Taiwan’s independence, sparking fury in China, which called on the United States to reinstate the message. Taiwan Foreign Minister Lin Chia-lungappreciated the removal.

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Luisa Vieira

Graphic Truth: Cutting military spending … in half?

Last week, US President Donald Trumpsaid he would soon meet with the leaders of Russia and China to discuss arms control and a proposal to slash all three countries’ military budgets in half. That’s a radical idea that would have a significant impact on all three economies and on global security more broadly – after all, the US, Russia, and China combined account for about half of all global defense spending, with the US alone clocking 40%.
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