NVIDIA can sell H200 AI chips to China
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Spending on AI has accelerated in recent months, as Wall Street anticipates global expenditures nearing half a trillion dollars by 2026.
The allegations reveal the failure of physical export controls and open a new front in the battle to end black-market chip sales.
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Quantum computing could be a $205 billion market within a decade, according to an analyst who recommends IonQ, Rigetti and D-Wave shares for investors willing to look past “lumpy” revenue.
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Democratic Senator calls on Nvidia CEO to testify on Trump's greenlight for China chip sales
Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren on Thursday called for Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and Commerce Department Secretary Howard Lutnick to testify after President Donald Trump announced plans to greenlight sales of Nvidia's second-most advanced AI chip to China.
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Beijing is set to limit access to Nvidia’s advanced H200 chips despite Donald Trump’s decision to allow the export of the technology to China as it pushes to achieve self-sufficiency in semiconductor production.
There's still no kill switch, but the optional feature would use GPU telemetry to estimate the location of a graphics card. It would roll out first to Nvidia's Blackwell chips.
President Trump’s decision to allow Nvidia to sell its chips to China has raised questions about whether he is prioritizing short-term economic gain over long-term American security interests.
Donald Trump’s decision to allow Nvidia Corp. to sell advanced chips to China marks more than just a shift in US tech policy. It also raises questions about how far he’ll go to steady ties with Xi Jinping.
Taiwan's tech-heavy stocks show few signs of slowing a rally even as AI bubble worries cast a shadow over global markets, underscoring home-grown confidence in the structural advantages in AI that foreign investors may have overlooked.