China has ordered local firms to stop purchasing AI chips from Nvidia, a move that could significantly impact Nvidia's finances in the coming months.
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NVIDIA and AMD have reportedly prepared a new stripped-down version of their existing GPUs to resume operations in China and also comply with US restrictions.
Chinese tech firms affected by U.S. chip curb are learning how to adapt to these restrictions while continuing to advance in AI development.
After the recent US crackdown on exporting H20 chips to China, Nvidia is working on a new downgraded chip for its Chinese customers.
While Nvidia's Chinese customers expected the delivery of their H20 orders, the company has left them in the dark about the recent curb on chip exports.
Despite Trump's tariff plan, the US Secretary of Commerce believes the only way to curb China in the AI race is to stay ahead of them with more innovation.
TSMC might be in trouble after its chip was found in a teardown of a Huawei device, which is a possible violation of U.S. export restrictions on Chinese companies.
ByteDance is training its new AI model on Huawei's chips, which are inferior to the ones made by Nvidia, amid ongoing U.S. trade restrictions on exports to China.
The US has revoked certain licenses that allowed companies like Qualcomm and Intel to export restricted chips and technology to Huawei. It is further tightening restrictions on the tech giant.
As a response to the growing tech export bans from the U.S., Huawei has announced the go-live of its in-house ERP system to reduce dependencies on U.S. vendors like Oracle, SAP, and more.
The U.S. Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) has imposed a $300 million penalty against Seagate for shipping $1.1 billion worth of hard disk drives to Huawei against the export rules set in 2019.
Japan joins US and Netherlands in restricting chip exports to China. New regulation comes amid US efforts to boost domestic chip production, including subsidies for semiconductor manufacturing.
In a new measure, the US government has reportedly begun blocking approvals of licenses to export to the Chinese tech giant Huawei, which covers most items and businesses within the US.
The Chinese phone manufacturer ZTE continues its efforts to stay in business despite the major setbacks imposed by the United States, and it has appointed a new chairman as part of the process.
Perhaps a comical attempt at getting back at the US government or perhaps a sign of its pitiful state of affairs, ZTE tells its employees it can't fix a broken urinal because of the US ban on it.