Huang Voices Disappointment After China Bans Nvidia’s AI Chips

Asian Financial Daily
4 Min Read
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NVIDIA head Jensen Huang was disappointed, but the philosophy of news is philosophical, i.e. China’s Internet regulator prohibits the company from building the latest bargaining chip for communist countries.

Huang said Wednesday that the U.S. and Beijing “have a bigger agenda to resolve” after reports that China has ordered top tech companies to stop buying U.S. companies’ AI chips and cancel existing orders.

The continuous U.S. government has limited China’s chances of getting high-level chips, prompting Beijing to urge domestic companies to stay away from U.S. suppliers, hitting industry leaders like Nvidia.

See also: China says Tiktok framework agreement is a “win-win” deal

The report appeared a few days later in Beijing Accused the company of violating its antitrust lawsmarking another outbreak of the trade war with Washington, while U.S. officials expressed national security issues during trade talks with China this week.

China’s cyberspace management directs companies, including Orcs and Alibaba, to terminate their testing and RTX Pro 6000D, Financial Times There were three people who knew about the matter, reported Wednesday.

“We will continue to support”

Huang said at a press conference in London: “There is only one country that wants us to be a market, we can only serve the market.”

“I’m disappointed with what I see, but they have a bigger agenda between China and the United States, and I’m patient with that. We will continue to support the Chinese government and Chinese companies.”

Alibaba, Bytedance and CAC did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment.

The report said the new ban was stronger than early guidance from regulators, which focused on the H20, a previous version of NVIDIA’s Chinese health AI chip.

NVIDIA’s RTX6000D is the latest artificial intelligence chip tailored for the Chinese market Luke-free demandReuters first reported earlier this week as some major tech companies chose not to place orders.

Several companies said they will order thousands of RTX Pro 6000Ds and start testing and verification work with NVIDIA’s server vendors, then telling them to stop working after receiving CAC orders.

  • Jim Pollard’s additional editor Reuters

See also:

NVIDIA’s latest AI chips are found to be rare

China uses detectors to target the chip industry and “dump”

US says hidden radio found in Chinese solar highway technology

Chinese tech giants “want NVIDIA chips” despite Beijing push back

We ended TSMC’s chip exemption to provide Chinese wafer fabs

The United States places trackers in AI chip transportation to capture China’s transfers”

NVIDIA CEO meets with TSMC to hold talks with us on chips in New China

China’s rhythm and NVIDIA deals are under careful scrutiny

The United States announces 100% tariff on imported chips, but major companies are exempt from taxes

NVIDIA CEO says our export restrictions on AI chips are “flawed” policies

China’s Huawei “hope its new AI chips will excite Nvidia”

China’s Huawei, Smic “strengthen production” of the latest AI chips

Satellite image display Huawei’s extended chip facilities- ft

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard has been an Australian journalist in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne, and then passed SE Asia in the late 1990s. He has been a senior editor in the United States for 17 years.

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