US signs collaboration agreements with Japan and South Korea for AI, chips and biotech



U.S. President Donald Trump touched down in Asia this week, not just for diplomacy, but to sign deals that could shape the next chapter of the global technology race. The U.S. inked Technology Prosperity Deals (TPD) with Japan and South Korea with an eye towards spurring collaboration on AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, biotech, space, 6G and other technologies.

The agreements aim to enhance cooperation, strengthen strategic ties, align regulations, and support economic and national security objectives, among other objectives. The new agreements follow roughly a month after the U.S. strengthened tech ties with the U.K.

The U.S. is effectively locking in partnerships to tap Japan and Korea’s expertise — Japan leads in advanced materials, robotics and space technologies, while South Korea dominates memory chip production.

The U.S.-Japan agreement aims to boost AI exports, enhance technology protections, and refocus collaboration on AI standards and innovation, per the White House. Meanwhile, the U.S. and Korea will collaborate to ease “operational burdens” for tech companies, focusing on removing obstacles to “innovative data localization and hosting architectures.”

Japan and the U.S. plan to “advance pro-innovation AI policy frameworks and initiatives to support a U.S.- and Japan-led AI ecosystem and promote exports across the full stack of U.S. and Japanese AI infrastructure, hardware, models, software, applications, and related standards,” according to a White House press release on October 28.

“The U.S.-Korea TPD will advance American interests with coordinated U.S.-Republic of Korea AI exports, strengthening both countries’ export controls and enforcement, and refocusing the partnership between the U.S. Center for AI Standards and Innovation, and the Korea AI Safety Institute on metrology and standards innovation,” the White House said on Wednesday.

The deals also address a broader goal: reducing dependence on China’s tech supply chain, and shaping the rules for technologies like AI and quantum computing.

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For the tech industry, these deals are a signal to watch these allied markets closely, as collaboration could create new opportunities for both startups and major tech companies. With the U.S., Japan, and South Korea aligning their tech strategies, future breakthroughs in AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, space, and 6G may come not just from individual labs, but from strategic partnerships aimed at staying ahead in the global tech race.




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