Nvidia's chips are no longer welcome in China
Briefly

Nvidia's chips are no longer welcome in China
"We probably contributed more to the China market than most countries have. And I'm disappointed with what I see,"
"But they have larger agendas to work out between China and the United States, and I'm understanding of that."
"They have no regard whatsoever for U.S. trademark law or any of the other provisions that make for fair trade agreements,"
"It is not the fault of the United States that there are these strained relations. It is the fault of China."
The Cyberspace Administration of China has barred Alibaba, ByteDance and other Chinese technology companies from purchasing and testing Nvidia's RTX Pro 6000D AI chips, despite thousands of chips having been ordered since July. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang expressed disappointment and noted Nvidia's substantial contributions to the China market while acknowledging broader Sino‑US agendas. Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson accused China of disregarding U.S. trademark law and seeking peer‑to‑peer adversary status. China is accelerating domestic chip development after reciprocal export controls with the U.S., and Nvidia previously negotiated H20 chip sales to China with a 15 percent profit cut.
Read at The Verge
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