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China's emerging autonomous vehicle industry, specifically its robotaxi segment, now operates under a period of increased regulatory scrutiny. Authorities have recently implemented more stringent licensing requirements for these driverless transport services. This move follows a significant operational malfunction in Wuhan, an incident that notably inconvenienced numerous passengers and caused traffic disruption lasting for several hours.


White autonomous car with logos driving on a road, skyscrapers and trees in the background under a partly cloudy sky.
Credit: APOLLO GO

The regulatory adjustments represent a distinct change in the strategic approach to advanced mobility solutions within the country. Previously, the emphasis for robotaxi organisations had been on the rapid deployment and widespread introduction of these services. However, this focus has evidently shifted towards a greater prioritisation of safety protocols and robust operational oversight.


And so, the regulatory bodies are currently conducting a detailed review into the precise causes of the Wuhan system failure. This examination seeks to understand the technical and procedural deficiencies that led to the prolonged interruption of services. The outcome of this review is expected to inform future policy decisions affecting the entire robotaxi ecosystem.


The incident itself, characterised by its capacity to strand passengers and impede traffic flows for an extended duration, highlights potential challenges inherent in the large scale operation of autonomous transport systems. Such occurrences necessitate a thorough analysis to prevent their recurrence. Operational reliability and public safety are now positioned at the forefront of regulatory concerns.


This recalibration of priorities means that companies developing and operating robotaxi services will likely face a more demanding environment for gaining official authorisation. Licensing processes are now demonstrably stricter, reflecting a more cautious stance by national and local authorities. The goal is to ensure a higher standard of operational security before further expansion proceeds.


The tightening of regulatory frameworks also signals a maturation of the industry's oversight mechanisms. As autonomous driving technology advances, the governance surrounding its public application must likewise evolve. This proactive stance aims to balance the drive for technological advancement with essential public safety considerations.


But some within the Big Tech companies developing these systems may find the new environment challenging. The previous era favoured quick market penetration, allowing organisations to scale operations with comparative speed. The current situation demands a more deliberate, safety oriented trajectory for expansion.


According to the SCMP, these licensing curbs directly followed the Wuhan system failure. The incident served as a critical impetus for the authorities to reconsider their initial policy framework. The intention is to cultivate a more secure operational landscape for future autonomous transport programmes.


One such service, Apollo Go, operates robotaxis. A safety operator typically sits in the driver's seat of an Apollo Go robotaxi. This indicates the continued presence of human oversight within some driverless vehicle operations, even as these vehicles travel to locations such as Wuhan Tianhe International Airport. The role of these human operators in managing unforeseen circumstances is a key aspect of current robotaxi deployment models.


The review of the Wuhan incident will likely scrutinise all facets of the system's operation, including hardware, software, and human intervention protocols. Lessons derived from this analysis will be instrumental in shaping the future development and regulatory compliance for all robotaxi developers and providers. The overall aim remains to build public trust in this evolving transport solution.


The current emphasis suggests that regulatory bodies are keen to establish a solid foundation of safety and reliability before allowing for an unrestricted proliferation of robotaxi services. This careful, phased approach is intended to mitigate risks associated with advanced autonomous technologies operating in complex urban environments. The industry's future growth is now explicitly tied to its ability to meet these elevated safety benchmarks.


  • Chinese regulators have intensified licensing requirements for robotaxis.

  • This regulatory shift was triggered by a recent system malfunction in Wuhan.

  • The Wuhan incident left passengers stranded and disrupted traffic for hours.

  • Authorities are now prioritising safety oversight over rapid deployment of services.

  • An Apollo Go robotaxi, with a safety operator, operates near Wuhan Tianhe International Airport.


Source: SCMP

Storage company shares increased in extended trading, following strong revenue and profit forecasts from Seagate Technology. The forecasts indicated sustained enterprise spending on artificial intelligence equipment.


Blue building with Seagate logo and text, green accents. Modern architecture. Clear sky background. Peaceful and sunny afternoon.
Credit: SEAGATE

Seagate's outlook and the surge in storage stocks highlighted investor confidence that enterprise AI expenditure will maintain demand for data-storage equipment. This occurred despite broader market concerns regarding the rate of AI adoption.


Organisations have funneled increasing amounts of money into data drives, hard disks, and other digital storage as they rushed to upgrade their artificial intelligence models and infrastructure.


Seagate shares soared 16% in extended trading, Western Digital increased 10%, Micron Technology climbed 3%, and SanDisk rose 4%. These gains added a combined USD 60 billion to the four storage technology companies' market value.


Seagate Chief Executive Officer Dave Mosley stated on a post-earnings conference call, "AI is amplifying demand across existing applications such as video, where large cloud providers are integrating AI in the platforms to boost user engagement and revenue opportunities, driving new video creation and the need to store it."


Seagate forecast fourth-quarter revenue of USD 3.45 billion, plus or minus USD 100 million. This projection surpassed estimates of USD 3.16 billion, according to data compiled by LSEG.


Executives at Seagate and rival Western Digital previously indicated their capacity had been fully allocated and sold out through calendar 2026.


In Tuesday's trading session, the Nasdaq fell almost 1%, hurt by concerns about the AI boom after a report said OpenAI has fallen short of its goals for new users and revenue in recent months.


Nasdaq futures rose 0.2% following Seagate's report, showing that traders expect tech stocks to partly rebound in Wednesday's session.


The increase in storage demand also coincides with a surge in memory prices. Power-hungry data centres utilise a significant portion of high-bandwidth memory to store and process vast amounts of information.


The shortage of memory chips has left companies scrambling to find hardware that can aid their AI efforts and store data, benefiting companies such as Seagate that make physical hard drives.


Ahead of Tuesday's report, Seagate shares had already more than doubled, year to date.

  • Seagate Technology's strong revenue and profit forecasts spurred an increase in storage company shares.

  • This outlook underscored investor confidence in sustained enterprise artificial intelligence spending for data storage.

  • Seagate, Western Digital, Micron Technology, and SanDisk saw significant stock gains, adding USD 60 billion to their market value.

Source: REUTERS

OpenAI's latest artificial intelligence (AI) models, including its Codex coding agent, are now available on Amazon Bedrock. This expansion follows OpenAI's renegotiation of its contract with long-time backer Microsoft, which previously gave the Windows maker exclusive rights to sell OpenAI's AI models on its Azure cloud platform.


A smartphone displaying "OpenAI" lies on a dark laptop keyboard. The ambiance is tech-focused with minimalist, moody lighting.
Credit: UNSPLASH

OpenAI is also rolling out a service for developers to build and deploy advanced AI agents using its frontier models on Amazon Web Services (AWS). This move offers customers access to OpenAI models without leaving the AWS environment, a long-standing request from users.


Matt Garman, chief executive officer of AWS, noted that customers' production applications and data run in AWS. OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman, appearing via a pre-recorded video, stated, "The opportunity ahead of us is enormous, and the most exciting part is that this is not something in the future, it's starting right now."


Amazon and OpenAI have deepened their ties over several months. Amazon invested $50 billion in OpenAI, while the AI startup committed to spend $100 billion on AWS over the next eight years.


The companies have also reached an agreement for OpenAI to utilise two gigawatts of computing capacity. This power will be supplied by Amazon's in-house Trainium AI chips, further solidifying their collaboration.


OpenAI is actively working to secure more computing capacity to bolster its enterprise business. This strategy aims to enhance its competitiveness against rival Anthropic, whose Claude models have gained significant popularity.


Making Codex available on AWS is expected to drive enterprise adoption and expand the coding agent's reach; it currently serves more than 4 million weekly active users. For Amazon, hosting and distributing OpenAI's products allows it to broaden its offerings beyond reliance on Anthropic.


This development also helps Amazon reassure investors that its substantial AI investments are beginning to yield returns. Earlier this month, Amazon Chief Executive Officer Andy Jassy disclosed that AI services at AWS generated an annualised revenue of more than $15 billion in the first quarter.


AWS revenue growth has climbed back past the 20% mark in the past two quarters, boosting investor confidence. Following the announcement, Amazon shares saw little change, trading down less than 1%.


Separately, Amazon announced new autonomous software products, referred to as agents. These products target companies seeking to enhance supply-chain planning or manage large-scale hiring, such as retailers preparing for the holiday selling season.

  • OpenAI's latest AI models, including Codex, are now available on Amazon Bedrock.

  • This follows OpenAI's renegotiation of its exclusive contract with Microsoft.

  • Amazon invested SGD 67.5 billion in OpenAI, which committed SGD 135 billion to AWS over eight years.


Source: REUTERS

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