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China AI Government United States

US Issues Warning To Nvidia, Urging To Stop Redesigning Chips For China (fortune.com) 86

At the Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California, on Saturday, US Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo issued a cautionary statement to Nvidia, urging them to stop redesigning AI chips for China that maneuver around export restrictions. "We cannot let China get these chips. Period," she said. "We're going to deny them our most cutting-edge technology." Fortune reports: Raimondo said American companies will need to adapt to US national security priorities, including export controls that her department has placed on semiconductor exports. "I know there are CEOs of chip companies in this audience who were a little cranky with me when I did that because you're losing revenue," she said. "Such is life. Protecting our national security matters more than short-term revenue."

Raimondo called out Nvidia Corp., which designed chips specifically for the Chinese market after the US imposed its initial round of curbs in October 2022. "If you redesign a chip around a particular cut line that enables them to do AI, I'm going to control it the very next day," Raimondo said. Communication with China can help stabilize ties between the two countries, but "on matters of national security, we've got to be eyes wide open about the threat," she said. "This is the biggest threat we've ever had and we need to meet the moment," she said.
Further reading: Nvidia CEO Says US Will Take Years To Achieve Chip Independence
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US Issues Warning To Nvidia, Urging To Stop Redesigning Chips For China

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  • by sanf780 ( 4055211 ) on Monday December 04, 2023 @08:02PM (#64054965)
    Shareholders ask Nvidia to maximize profits. Not doing so gives trouble to people in charge. US can ask, nobody needs to comply. Unless it is more profitable to sell chips to somebody in the US.
    • "If you redesign a chip around a particular cut line that enables them to do AI, I'm going to control it the very next day,"

      That is not asking

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      What's Paul Pelosi's current position on NVidia stock? That will tell us exactly where things are headed.
    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday December 04, 2023 @09:26PM (#64055167)

      US can ask, nobody needs to comply.

      Yeah ... that's not how sanctions work.

    • Profit without restraint is unreasonable. If companies followed your logic, every last publicly traded company would be violating just about every law on the books to maximize profit. Shareholders ask companies to maximize profits within the confines of the law.
      • Companies try to follow that logic though. Thankfully, most of the laws are such that breaking them results in a worse outcome than following them. If breaking a law earns you $10k, but you are fined $100k, then it does not make sense to break the law.
        OTOH, if breaking the law earns you $1M, but you are fined $100k, then it is very profitable to break the law.
        If breaking the law lands the CEO in prison, then the CEO will be unwilling to do it, even if the shareholders may like it.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's an existential threat to Nvidia. China is a huge and growing market, and Chinese companies are developing GPUs at a rapid pace. The last time Gamer's Nexus tested one, it was a few generations behind the latest AMD and Nvidia parts, but a dramatic improvement over previous Chinese GPUs, and in supported games the performance was actually quite usable.

      Nvidia's secret weapon is that they provide a lot of proprietary tooling along with their GPUs, for AI and stuff like raytracing in games. That locks comp

  • by Anonymous Coward
    The Us gov't should have been more strict on the specs. Now it's kinda late.
  • by leonbev ( 111395 ) on Monday December 04, 2023 @09:08PM (#64055115) Journal

    Instead of offering a 4090 "D" variant and saying that it's only for China, release a slightly cheaper "4080 Super" model and make it available to everyone.

    If it just happens to be slightly below the maximum TPP for Chinese export, that's just a coincidence, right? NVidia was going to planning on releasing this GPU anyway, because it still LOVES its core gaming customers and obviously isn't trying to make another blantant cash grab with the AI gold rush like it did before with crypto mining :)

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      Depending on how quickly China can steal/clone the tools needed to make chips and make the photomasks needed for production, there will come a "next time" where Nvidia has an unofficial branch in China making full-blown chips running at full power.

      The Chinese market is larger than the US market, and because the technology exported to China is crippleware, if they can move to in-country production, the significance of any upgrade will be much greater. That will be in the minds of chipmakers dealing with US p

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        On what process? China's "next-gen" domestic semiconductor manufacturing is 14nm, while current gen is 19-28nm. By contrast, NVidia's H100 is 4nm.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          I think East Germany is a cautionary tale. They decided they were going to be a microelectronics powerhouse, and dedicated huge national resources toward it. They sought to achieve it by copying and stealing massively, and they were really good at doing so - not just getting designs, but actual pieces of production hardware. What they weren't good at doing, it turned out, was doing actual microelectronics manufacturing - indeed, their efforts to do so greatly contributed to the dire economic situation th

          • by jd ( 1658 )

            I completely agree that the USSR and East Germany botched it for the reasons you gave. I'd add micromanaging as well, although I suspect that this was tightly coupled to the corruption.

            (I do not expect India to become a world-class economy for the same reason. Corruption is endemic there, which is one reason that their cheapo pill factories have quite the reputation of churning out deadly products.)

            China scores 45 on the corruption index and ranks 65th. The USA scored 69 and is 24th, Taiwan scored 68 and is

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      If it just happens to be slightly below the maximum TPP for Chinese export, that's just a coincidence, right?

      You apparently think regulators are morons.

      They've tried to carve out a hole for NVidia to continue to sell consumer cards to China. If NVidia is clearly abusing it, that hole will be closed on them, and it won't be anyone's fault but their own.

      • by leonbev ( 111395 )

        That's kind of the point of what I was saying, though. Instead of blatantly dodging the Chinese export restriction, NVidia should actually release a new 4000 series card that people actually want. Right now, there is a big price and performance gap between the $1,200 4080 and the $2,000+ 4090 that a "4080 Super" or "4080 Ti" product could fill.

        • by Rei ( 128717 )

          I can only speak for myself, but I'm only in the market for 3090s until they either add NVLink back or increase the VRAM. As far as I'm concerned, 4090 is a downgrade as far as my needs go.

  • ...from acquiring tech is futile and counterproductive
    They will get what they need on the black market
    Even worse, what happens if they develop something WE need

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      From the black market for now, but they're rapidly learning how to clone the technology. At some point, they will be self-sufficient, save for occasionally needing to steal plans for upgrades. If they succeed in stealing or cloning the Deep UV chipmaking tools, they won't have any need for anything made in the US. And the US is giving the Chinese plenty of reasons to follow such a path.

      RISC-V is open source and is looking to replace all of the custom processors currently out there through the use of custom

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        RISC-V is open source and is looking to replace all of the custom processors currently out there through the use of custom extensions to the basic design. If that's actually doable, and it's case unproven for right now, then China will effectively be level pegging with the US on this new approach. Only, the Chinese will have less legacy infrastructure issues and a far more rapidly expanding market.

        If RISC-V doe end up dominating, then yes I fully expect them to come up with extensions that the rest of the w

  • You mean our system that encourages rabidly capitalist companies is being gamed by rabidly capitalist companies?

    [surprised Pikachu face]

    • by jd ( 1658 )

      The problem won't just be Nvidia gaming the system, China is working hard to take the US out of the loop and to reduce the dependency on European equipment manufacturers. Either through innovation or outright theft. (Pretty much what the US did in the late 19th century, early 20th century.)

      Sooner or later, Nvidia will be able to simply make the highest-end gear in China. And if they don't, the Chinese will simply steal the designs and make the chips themselves. Nvidia isn't stupid and will find a way to tak

  • US makes a ban list, Nvidia stop selling some stuff in China but sells other stuff not on the ban list. Then US complains Nvidia should not sell some of that stuff. I don't understand the problem, of course Nvidia want sales and will sell stuff not on the ban list, why the ban was not more inclusive?

  • China are building everything needed for chip making, to take the US out of the loop. They already have extensive facilities and this will only increase. Meanwhile, America is struggling to build just one cutting-edge fab plant and can't make any of the Deep UV gear themselves.

    In the meantime, capitalists will evaluate whose markets are the larger and where the best returns are for stockholders, they're just not going to care about international rivalry.

    If China can fabricate the chips Nvidia wants, in the

  • While to the average person this regulator sounds like he's bullish on national security, to those who know either computer science, engineering, or even tool and die work, he sounds rather naive. In the first place, a ban on selling Nvidia chips to China won't prevent China from acquiring them, and in the second place, selling them chips won't help China make them.

    The process of lithography for producing chips is by this time well understood. When I built my lathe from scratch, the most amazing part o

  • Like if a $200 million budget wasn't enough already to stop Nvidia from exporting AI chips to China.

    If they really want to stop that from happening, they could add AI chips to an ITAR-like list directed to China and allies and force AI chips maker to request a license for every chip model they want to export to those countries.

  • As an American, I can't help but feel that this is going to bite us in the future. China has a metric assload of PhDs graduating every year. Eventually they are going to invent a better mousetrap and we're going to be apologizing, hat in hand.

    They are only spending about 20% less on R&D than the US, and money goes a LOT farther in China than it does here.

  • If we tell business what to do, that's tyranny and violating free speech, right?

    Or do we hate China more now?

    If you're a conservative, I guess it's much easier if you don't try to think for yourself.
  • I used to feel smarter having read Slashdot.

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