He looks at Qianxin’s latest project—a generative AI called "Q-GPT" that can write custom incident response plans in 0.3 seconds. It’s powerful. It’s also potentially a weapon. He smiles grimly. The game has changed again. The wall is no longer digital; it’s legal and ethical.
Often referred to as the "CrowdStrike of China" or the "Palo Alto Networks of the East," Qianxin has rapidly evolved from a spin-off into a publicly traded behemoth. But reducing it to a mere clone of Western giants misses the nuance of its business model, its technological innovation in zero-trust architecture, and its crucial role in national cyber sovereignty. qianxin