Following the popularity of the new energy vehicle, lithium battery, and photovoltaic industries in the global market, China's digital service export circuit this year ushered in a new category — the word element. Computing power services that revolve around terms have become an emerging racetrack for digital services trade. Unlike physical goods trade, which relies on cross-border logistics, the term “overseas” business enables full-link digital circulation, lower trade barriers, and opens up a new path of globalization in China's digital economy. The surface layer of the term “going overseas” is the cross-border circulation of computing power services, and the core is the export of China's complete computing power infrastructure capabilities to the outside world. As global AI competition shifts from “whose model is bigger” to “whose supply is more stable,” China not only exports computing power service products to the outside world, but also simultaneously exports industry standards, rule systems, and complete computing power infrastructure solutions. The word element is becoming the “digital crude oil” of the intelligent era. Relying on perfect software and hardware support, institutional systems, and new infrastructure support, China is steadily growing into a supplier of core infrastructure for the global artificial intelligence industry.

Zhitongcaijing · 2d ago
Following the popularity of the new energy vehicle, lithium battery, and photovoltaic industries in the global market, China's digital service export circuit this year ushered in a new category — the word element. Computing power services that revolve around terms have become an emerging racetrack for digital services trade. Unlike physical goods trade, which relies on cross-border logistics, the term “overseas” business enables full-link digital circulation, lower trade barriers, and opens up a new path of globalization in China's digital economy. The surface layer of the term “going overseas” is the cross-border circulation of computing power services, and the core is the export of China's complete computing power infrastructure capabilities to the outside world. As global AI competition shifts from “whose model is bigger” to “whose supply is more stable,” China not only exports computing power service products to the outside world, but also simultaneously exports industry standards, rule systems, and complete computing power infrastructure solutions. The word element is becoming the “digital crude oil” of the intelligent era. Relying on perfect software and hardware support, institutional systems, and new infrastructure support, China is steadily growing into a supplier of core infrastructure for the global artificial intelligence industry.