So I was just doing a bit of research about some science advancements in graphene processors, as I heard about it in a segment about China's recent research breakthroughs. I did some googling and found... let's say a slightly biased perspective (Just kidding, it's straight up propaganda)
So this is the research paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2308.12446.pdf
Notice how there are 12 researchers from Tianjin University in China, also notice how there are 3 researchers from Georgia Tech, this includes one american author who co-founded this research center with person in china. So this is a joint effort. He's actually listed as also being a part of Tianjin University, so I guess 13 to 3 people in each respective university (one person double counted).
If you google for "graphene seg semiconductors" you get:
- Georgia techs website first, okay.
- A couple links to the article on arxiv and nature, cool,
And then, a bunch of news articles:
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https://www.power-and-beyond.com/scientists-develop-the-newest-semiconductor-of-2024-a-85c344436bde92e7350122cb5c012b7a/ - doesn't mention china at all, never Tianjin, only Georgia institute
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https://spectrum.ieee.org/graphene-semiconductor - doesn't mention china at all
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https://www.networkworld.com/article/1288967/georgia-tech-researchers-achieve-key-breakthrough-in-graphene-semiconductors.html opens with Georgia tech did such and such, mentions china half way though in passing.
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https://eepower.com/market-insights/researchers-create-worlds-first-graphene-semiconductor/# - opens with georgia tech, no mention of china
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https://www.newscientist.com/article/2410612-first-working-graphene-semiconductor-could-lead-to-faster-computers/ - you guessed it, all georgia tech, no mention of china at all
Well damn, with 13 out of the 15 researchers having affiliation with the lab in China, you would think that someone would emphasize that this research was done... In China? Not just "helped" by China, not just "assisted by", but like, most of the research was done there. On paper this was a partnership, but most sites won't even go that far. Georgia Tech did this/that/was awesome/yay america, oh and some place in China was involved too, only sometimes mentioned.
My god, it's as if Usonians just can't swallow the fact that China has scientists... and researchers... and like, smart people. As a Usonian who is breaking out of my media bubble, it's crazy to me to see how fucking biased our "neutral" sources of information are. Wikipedia hasn't been updated with this info yet, but I bet it will mark down all the awesome work Georgia tech did while only mentioning in passing that some place in China was also involved.
I'm not even gonna bother posting this to a lib space like reddit. The copium would be too much for me to handle. The only thing I can think about is if the tables were turned, no lib would have a problem calling out "CCP propaganda" after the first sentence of the article claimed "Tianjin University in China does breakthrough research on graphene processors!"
Okay, so I've been thinking about this one myself too. Baidu might have different results But at the same time, you would think that at least mentioning the partnership involved would have happened more often than not.
And it wouldn't tickle me so hard if all of the English-speaking internet believed that all their shit was so fucking neutral. Like Wikipedia is the source of all human knowledge. But kind of ignoring the fact that it's from a completely colonial perspective, And all of their history and politics pages are written from a purely Western perspective.
Also, if anybody has any recommendations on reading Chinese internet in English or using tools or something, I'm very interested in pursuing it, but I haven't had the time to sit down and really study it. But if you send me some links, then I'll put them in my backlog and get to it later.
For other languages (French, Urdu) there's at least an abstract in English.