DeepSeek uses banned Nvidia chips for AI model, report says

(finance.yahoo.com)

243 points | by goodway 4 hours ago ago

204 comments

  • nostrademons 2 hours ago

    I thought this was common knowledge. DeepSeek’s Wikipedia entry says that they trained all their models on Nvidia chips procured before the U.S. embargo to China on them. It wouldn’t surprise me if they continued acquiring them through, well, less than legal means.

    I also read somewhere (not Wikipedia) that they trained on ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini queries, basically feeding in the output of competitor’s LLMs as training data. Kinda surprised they didn’t run into model collapse problems, but they stole their training data from other people who stole their training data from data collections that arguably stole them from content creators. It’s bandits all the way down, so adding a little smuggling to that doesn’t surprise me.

    • ComputerGuru 2 hours ago

      > It’s bandits all the way down, so adding a little smuggling to that doesn’t surprise me.

      Implying it’s *morally* wrong for a Chinese company to bypass US sanctions is hilarious. You really say that with a straight face when even the president admits this is only protectionism?

      • voidnap 2 hours ago

        Yes. The bans are export controls. They are not banned in china. They are just banned from export in the US. Using them in china is legal in china.

        • ignoramous an hour ago

          > Yes. The bans are export controls.

          These export controls increasingly look like "tax".

            The White House said the US government would take a 25 percent cut of the chip’s sales, similar to a deal with AMD and Nvidia earlier this year that allowed them to sell lower-powered AI chips to China while paying the US government 15 percent of the proceeds.
          
          > Using them in China is legal in China.

          Technically, yes. The CCP, though, wants to incentivize Chinese firms to use domestically-manufactured chips.

          https://www.silicon.co.uk/e-innovation/artificial-intelligen... / https://archive.vn/B2pah

          • actionfromafar 7 minutes ago

            This recent White House is another animal. It’s just bribes all the way down.

          • htek 24 minutes ago

            That's Corporatism. It's from the fascist playbook where the state takes partial or complete ownership of private companies. Where does that money go, to some slush fund for the president? The reason for the export controls is to keep our potential adversaries from being on the bleeding edge of frontier AI. It goes against the US's interests to give China a leg up with advanced chips. It's almost laughable, of course, as the Nvidia chips are already manufactured in a country that China claims as their own. If they ever pressed the issue, we could find ourselves without the most advanced chips.

      • echelon 2 hours ago

        It's the moral imperative of every country to optimize for its citizens' economic prospects.

        The CIA (and every other intelligence org.) is literally a weapon designed to operate in the grey area to fit the mandate of the policy makers and elected leadership. Many of the things they do are questionable or worse. In the case of the DoD, they do these things at the behest of democratically elected leadership.

        Of course US and China will operate in their own best interests. Of course they will both play chess, both name call, both sanction and impede. When it's not a hot war, it is still a never-ending battle for each country's total economic, soft, and hard power market share.

        This is every country.

        It's geopolitics.

        • yannyu an hour ago

          This is just "might makes right" but modern. I don't know that this is the consistent, wide-held belief that you seem to think it is. Plenty of people would rather our governments not engage in clandestine disruption and undermining of foreign governments.

          Competition is inevitable, especially between geopolitical rivals, but we don't have to engage in Minitrue-style "the enemy has always been our enemy" rhetoric.

          • echelon an hour ago

            We live under economic conditions created by a government that does intervene. And a greater world order established by a hegemon that does intervene.

            It would be interesting to see what life would be like today had that not happened. It might be better, it might be worse. Probably a little of both for different groups of people.

            As the world returns to multi-polarity, there are signs of increases in violence.

            The last time the world had multi-polarity, we had far more wars. Including the worst wars the world has ever seen.

            • yannyu an hour ago

              > The last time the world had multi-polarity, we had far more wars. Including the worst wars the world has ever seen.

              Citations? Simply saying that World War 1 happened during a time of multi-polarity is just begging the question. Multi-polarity of varying degrees has always been the case throughout human history, and often times single-polarity is achieved only through extreme violence.

            • realusername a minute ago

              This is not news, I had "the multi polar world" in history class in high school in the early 2000s, it's just that the US suddenly realized it.

        • drysine a minute ago

          >It's the moral imperative of every country to optimize for its citizens' economic prospects.

          Moral???

        • hearsathought an hour ago

          > It's the moral imperative of every country to optimize for its citizens' economic prospects.

          "Moral imperative"? No country was ever created out of a moral imperative. None. Also, no country was ever created to optimize for its citizens' economic prospects. Every country was created by the elites for the benefits of the elites.

          • echelon an hour ago

            > We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.--That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, --That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

            The intent is there.

            It's an incredibly complex distributed system with millions of actors and interactions, entrenched powers, regulatory capture, Citizens United, etc. It has to be defended and garbage collected.

            • hearsathought an hour ago

              > The intent is there.

              The declaration of independence was written by one of the wealthiest slave owners in the country. "Moral imperative" was certainly not behind the american revolution. The economic interests of the elites were. There are no saints in politics. Just interests - mostly of the elites.

    • htrp 32 minutes ago

      Everyone trains on queries from other models, it's called distillation

      • LogicFailsMe 4 minutes ago

        Well, given AI content cannot be copyrighted, haters can hate hate hate hate hate...

    • ComputerGuru 2 hours ago

      > I also read somewhere (not Wikipedia) that they trained on ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini queries, basically feeding in the output of competitor’s LLMs as training data

      All the labs permitting synthetic data do that.

    • KumaBear an hour ago

      Lets take the weapons embargos placed on Israel by our allies. In the NDAA must pass bill we set funds aside to procure those weapons and sell them to Israel. We don't really care about these things we have selective enforcement.

    • MangoToupe 2 hours ago

      > less than legal means.

      This is an absurd concept when it comes to international trade. Even intellectual property is mostly meaningless outside a state. Of course people will evade sanctions; what is the us going to do, invade singapore or malaysia?

      • PunchyHamster 20 minutes ago

        The companies it "stole" from broke the law in their own country while acquiring the training data; frankly sanction avoidance is lesser and arguably not even their (it's the people in US that smuggle them, nothing breaking china law afaik) crime

      • tlb an hour ago

        Just because something is hard to enforce doesn't mean it's absurd.

        Embargoes aren't impossible to enforce against the foreign importer. If a foreign entity is found to have placed orders with false documents, they can be sanctioned, which can be enforced against any of their international operations. It makes it hard for them to do future business in global markets. I would not recommend violating US sanctions no matter where you are.

    • epolanski 30 minutes ago

      Lol @ quoting 3 companies that broke any possible copyright law as victims.

    • lysace 2 hours ago

      Singapore is where it happens.

    • echelon 2 hours ago

      > Kinda surprised they didn’t run into model collapse problems,

      This is just model distillation.

      Anyone with the expertise to build a model from scratch (which DeepSeek certainly can) can do this in a careful manner.

      > but they stole their training data from other people who stole their training data from data collections that arguably stole them from content creators.

      Bingo.

      I have no problem with pirates pirating other pirates.

      Screw OpenAI and Anthropic closed source models built from public data. The law should be that weights trained from non-owned sources should be public domain, or that any copyright holder can sue them and demand model takedown.

      Google and Meta are probably the only two AI companies that have a right to license massive amounts of training data from social media and user file uploads given that their ToSes grant them these rights. But even Meta is pirating stuff.

      Even if OpenAI and Anthropic continue pirating training data and keeping the results closed, China's open source strategy will win out in the end. It erodes the crust of value that is carefully guarded by the American giants. Everyone else will be integrating open models and hacking them apart, splicing them in new ways.

      • rkagerer 2 hours ago

        Google and Meta are probably the only two companies that have a right to license their training data

        For the sake of someone unfamiliar... Why is that?

        Did they pay teams of monkeys to generate their own, novel training data? Or gain explicit, opt-in permission from users who entrust them with their files/content?

        • noboostforyou an hour ago

          I'm pretty sure Meta stole a bunch of content for training by torrenting it - https://www.pcgamer.com/gaming-industry/court-documents-show...

        • echelon 2 hours ago

          > For the sake of someone unfamiliar... Why is that?

          I edited my comment, but basically they both own massive social media properties (YouTube, Instagram, Facebook) or file upload sites (Google Drive, Google Photos, Gmail) and their ToSes grant them these rights. You accept these terms when you use their services.

          That's not great, but we are getting free services. It's in the terms.

          It's a whole lot better than just scraping without permission, compensation, acknowledgement, or even notice.

          To be clear, I have no problem with these models being built. But if they "steal" the data, the resultant model shouldn't be owned by anyone. It should be public domain and not allowed to be kept as a trade secret.

          And it's funny that Anthropic is trying to depress our wages by training on our code. Again - I'm fine with that - I want to work faster, and I like these models and their capabilities. But Anthropic shouldn't be able to own the models they train off of us exclusively since they didn't license or buy our data. They provided us with nothing at all.

          • PunchyHamster 17 minutes ago

            Facebook stole copyrighted material well above their own and admitted to it. It's not just "we took our users data", its "we literally downloaded torrent with 81 terabytes of books and used that for training".

            Google most likely did something similar, just using books they already had indexed in Google Books, and probably by still seriously violating any reasonable notion of copyright

          • rkagerer an hour ago

            You accept these terms when you use their services.

            I certainly didn't*. I'd love to see litigation testing just how solid those insidious opt-in-by-default schemes are as a basis for "ownership".

            If they had users explicitly opt-in with a "Yes, go ahead and train on my stuff and by the way I assert that I have all the rights to grant you the same", I'd have no problem with that, and they'd have a much stronger claim.

            (*Before others inevitably disagree: I do opt-out of this stuff aggressively, and further send notice to companies from time to time that I don't agree to certain objectionable clauses of their ToS and they're welcome to close my account).

        • ffsm8 2 hours ago

          The explicit opt in is only necessary under gdpr, which is a lot of data, but not a majority.

          • rkagerer an hour ago

            only necessary under gdpr

            It's not that simple. The EU may be the only ones to have codified that, but there's centuries of case law in other jurisdictions dealing with ownership, that once the matter hits litigation might turn out to say something other than these tech companies would like.

  • mongrelion 4 hours ago

    I recommend everyone to watch GamersNexus' documentary on the NVIDIA AI GPU black market. They explain how companies like DeepSeek can get a hold of chips that are otherwise banned by the US government to export to China

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1H3xQaf7BFI

    • the_pwner224 4 hours ago

      I was just selling my RTX 4090 on Ebay recently and got a ton of bids from Chinese accounts. The winner ($2,325) had Australia set as the country on their profile, but a Chinese name on the account, and the order shipping address was to a different Chinese name (to a regular single-family house in Delaware). Most bidders straight up had China as their profile country.

      So my 4090 (24 GB) is probably going to get turned into a 48/96 GB VRAM frankenstein in a Chinese chop shop. I haven't watched the full 3.5 hour documentary you linked but from the first few minutes, it seems quite interesting. And covers this exact thing.

      Edit: Again, I checked the address, it was a house, not a freight forwarder warehouse. And if it was actually going to AU, the forwarder would be on the west coast in CA/WA, not east coast (had another order go to Thailand with a forwarder in SF. And Miami is the big hub for South America). For legit freight forwarding they also wouldn't have different names on the account & shipping address. As the parent comment's YT video describes, these are often just normal Chinese-Americans or international students who do this to make a bit of extra money.

      • BigTTYGothGF 3 hours ago

        People with Chinese names do sometimes live in Delaware.

        • jhfdbkofdchk 3 hours ago

          Do they all live at the same address of the overseas freight forwarder too? I've sold stuff on eBay to someone in Europe who had me ship to the same address in Delaware. I was confused so I googled the address and turned up the freight forwarding service.

          • secret-noun an hour ago

            This has happened to me a couple of times with eBay sales.

            Is it safe to transact with people who use freight forwarders in your experience? Do you lose any protections?

            Out of fear, in my cases, I cancelled the auctions.

            On second thought though, I wonder if it's actually the buyer using the service that is more at risk (introduction of 3rd party, more complex delivery, probably impossible to return, etc)

        • kube-system 3 hours ago

          If you are selling in the US, and an account with a primary address overseas buys your item and uses a US shipping address, you are likely shipping to a package forwarder. These services are common because many people and businesses in the US only ship to the US.

          I have my eBay account set this way, and I still get bids from overseas accounts -- I always Google the shipping address, 100% of the time it has been a package forwarder.

        • square_usual 3 hours ago

          And Australia; ~5% of Australia's population is Chinese origin.

        • Tostino 3 hours ago

          With their profile in Australia?

          • yardstick 3 hours ago

            While this is likely what the op was suggesting,

            I would like to point out that in Australia and NZ, it can be a massive pain to find someone who will ship internationally.

            Normally this is for things like Amazon US, and other US-based companies. There are services[1][2] that advertise virtual postal addresses in your purchase-country where they’ll box and ship it to you.

            So yes, a Chinese name based in Australia with a shipping address in the US isn’t immediately a red flag. Lots of Chinese in Australia and NZ, and lots of people here like to use shipping services like this.

            1. https://www.nzpost.co.nz/tools/you-shop

            2. https://www.choice.com.au/shopping/online-shopping/buying-on... (Scroll to bottom)

            • fn-mote 2 hours ago

              > Chinese name based in Australia with a shipping address in the US isn’t immediately a red flag

              And a good thing, too, or I would be concerned about posting that I knew it was going somewhere forbidden.

        • tirant 3 hours ago

          Sometimes. But the vast proportion live in China. Like 9000 vs 1.4 Billion.

      • Lammy 2 hours ago

        > So my 4090 (24 GB) is probably going to get turned into a 48/96 GB VRAM frankenstein in a Chinese chop shop

        Cool, though. Where can I buy one? :p

        • robotnikman 6 minutes ago

          last I checked you can find these cards with more VRAM on aliexpress and ebay.

      • txdv 24 minutes ago

        Can't they do it here? or will the authorities go after these kind of upgrades?

      • hinkley 2 hours ago

        I got a work laptop stolen (in my favorite bag, which they don’t make anymore) and found out from the police that there’s a chain from fences for drug addicts to criminal organizations in the Middle East. They’ve found American hardware there a number of times. Little harder to steal a desktop graphics card in general, but breakins happen.

    • embedding-shape 4 hours ago

      Yeah, or just jump unto Alibaba and Ebay from any neighboring country to China and see for yourself how easy it would be to buy a GPU then transport yourself ~500m and now be within China with these GPUs.

    • hinkley 2 hours ago

      Where does nvidia manufacture those chips?

      • vel0city 2 hours ago

        The Republic of a China, not the People's Republic of China. You might not legally be able to identify the difference in your jurisdiction.

        • hinkley 19 minutes ago

          Right. I am a TSMC shareholder. I know this story.

    • brendoelfrendo 4 hours ago

      One of the keys being, of course, that the Chinese government doesn't care. Yeah it might require mules bringing the GPUs into China but once they're in China, no one is breaking any laws. Of course DeepSeek is using these GPUs! It's not illegal for them to do so!

      • whatsupdog 3 hours ago

        Chinese government recently banned Chinese companies from buying Nvidia chips.

        • berdario 3 hours ago

          Yup, the change was in the news in September

          https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/09/china-blocks-sal...

          • hedora 3 hours ago

            That’s not a ban of nvidia chips though. It’s for a few of the biggest companies, and is specifically telling them not to buy a made-for-china SKU:

            > The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) told companies, including ByteDance and Alibaba, this week to end their testing and orders of the RTX Pro 6000D, Nvidia’s tailor-made product for the country, according to three people with knowledge of the matter

      • lenerdenator 3 hours ago

        The US government doesn't really care either.

        We have someone in the comments section talking about how they encountered a bunch of suspicious bidders on their GPU auction. That's not what happens when people care about being potentially investigated for breaking export rules.

        • pests 2 hours ago

          > suspicious bidders

          A person with a Chinese name living in Delaware? Gasp.

  • codedokode 4 hours ago

    Sanctions just slightly increase the cost of obtaining an item, but don't make it impossible. Electronic components can be bought, oil can be sold, ChatGPT can be used via OpenRouter, sanctioned banks publish their apps under guise into App Store, etc. When there are 200 countries in the world, and money involved, you can get anything.

    Sanctioned goods could be used to spread propaganda though, imagine, for example, if installing a NVIDIA GPU driver required answering questions about Tiananmen square incident.

    • littlecranky67 4 hours ago

      This. And it should be obvious. Drugs are banned and illegal in almost every country, yet they reach the US in vast amounts. Why would a ban on GPUs suddenly work - especially since owning a truckload of GPU is perfectly legal in most countries. Smuggling them to where the demand is, is probably easier than smuggling drugs.

      • rchaud 3 hours ago

        The illegality of something and the enforcement of that illegality can be mutually exclusive. Iran had sanctions placed on them after the 1979 revolution, but the US funneled arms to them anyway to raise money to ovethrow the Nicaraguan government [0]. Cocaine is illegal but the CIA trafficked it anyway to again raise money to topple the Sandinistas [1].

        [0] https://www.history.com/articles/iran-contra-affair#Oliver-N...

        [1] https://www.cnn.com/US/9811/03/cia.drugs/

      • stackskipton 3 hours ago

        It is easier then smuggling drugs because US is not making it difficult to sidestep the sanctions. Hey, this random house in Delaware is buying a ton of GPUs, should we investigate? Nah, our donors don’t actually want Nvidia stock to go down so ignore it.

        • cj 3 hours ago

          I don’t think the root problem is political corruption or donors.

          If anything, the hundreds of millions of dollars from AI lobbyists would overwhelmingly support anything that would prevent anyone outside of the US getting their hands on computer chips.

          The AI lobby in support of banning export of chips is way greater than anyone lobbying the opposite.

          > should we investigate? Nah, our donors […]

          The US government is a very slow moving bureaucracy. Slower to adapt than the slowest moving large public company.

          The GPU chip issue came about suddenly, out of the blue, and caught the government unprepared. When that happens, it typically takes government years to catch up and figure out how to adapt.

          Even in cases where incentives are aligned in favor of the government’s position, they still take forever to roll out meaningful change with effective enforcement - e.g. charging sales tax on software business, remember that Supreme Court case years ago? Or remember all the concern about engineer salaries being de-categorized as R&D? These are examples that are legally decided but gov is incredibly slow to enforce. The Wayfair supreme court case was back in 2018, right? Many years later, most SaaS companies are still getting away with not charging sales tax. Certain states are just now stating to enforce, 7 years later.

        • dlisboa 2 hours ago

          Investigate and do what? It's not illegal to buy GPUs, the sanctions have no power in this space. Who could a law even hurt here, the seller who is a single individual? If they made it illegal to individually export them out of the US the Chinese could just buy them somewhere else.

          • stackskipton 2 hours ago

            You can investigate buyers who have anomalous purchase patterns for sanction violations and convict them. DEA commonly looks at narcotic purchases by legal buyers for indications they might be funneling it to illegal market and investigates. NVidia could report "Hey, we are seeing massive purchases from entities we didn't expect so you might want to look into that"

      • codedokode 4 hours ago

        Maybe criminal cartels should switch to GPU trafficking?

        • bad_haircut72 3 hours ago

          By now most Mafias of the world are probably trying to train their own models

        • sofixa 2 hours ago

          Mexican cartels were branching out into the avocado trade, so why not.

          • zipy124 25 minutes ago

            Cartels, mafias and other criminal organisations have been involved in other industries for many generations now. Money laundering requires legitimate businesses and if that business happens to turn a profit. That's even better. Just look at the construction industry in new York or Italy many decades ago.

      • nyolfen 3 hours ago

        great thinking, that must be why the ccp doesn't care about this policy

    • mcdow 2 hours ago

      This is tangential but the whole Tiananmen Square thing is kind of odd. When I visited China many people were more willing to discuss it than I had imagined. Some spoke about it unsolicited. It’s a tourist destination you have to buy tickets for. It’s rather subtle what can and cannot be discussed relating to it. Those I spoke to about it told me that most people have a good understanding of what happened, and many people speak negatively of the CCP. You just can’t do it if you have a major platform (e.g. you’re Jack Ma or you are an LLM).

      Not to discount how negative free speech restrictions are, but I’m not so sure how effective that particular propaganda campaign would be.

      • whimsicalism 2 hours ago

        A few things: In tourist areas they will feel comfortable talking about the protests/reprisal because they get inundated by American tourists wanting to ask them about it. "It’s a tourist destination you have to buy tickets for" -> Right, Tiananmen square has no stigma at all, but that is different from the 1989 incident.

        If you post about the 1989 incident on Weibo, it will absolutely get removed and you might get the local police visiting you -- depending on how much time they have on their hands and how incendiary your post was.

      • SoftTalker 2 hours ago

        > many people speak negatively of the CCP

        Probably true. Right up to the point where they attract a little too much attention, or annoy the wrong party official. Then all that they said becomes evidence of their crimes.

    • kspacewalk2 4 hours ago

      I agree, except with the word "slightly". It can be so significant that this increased cost/friction is the very mechanism of the sanctions' effectiveness. Is it possible to police the Russian oil shadow fleet to extinction? Maybe, but even without doing so you can impose a decent haircut on their profits by issuing scary-sounding press releases and leaving it at that.

      • codedokode 4 hours ago

        Increased costs might be a factor in a competing commercial market, but for military purposes, you buy the components no matter the price or search for an alternative (China is now making lot of components - for example, resistors, transistors, logic chips - I have several 74HC chips of Chinese origin, and they are very cheap). Also, there are thousands ships and no legal basis for "policing" them in open sea.

    • amarant 4 hours ago

      Imagine the correct answer being "what incident?"

  • kazinator 3 hours ago

    > chips that are banned in the country

    > The US bans the sale of these advanced semiconductors to China

    Whoa there, Bloomberg; just because the USA bans the sale of something to your country doesn't make it banned in your country.

    • Andoryuuta 2 hours ago

      I believe it is very much a two-way ban, depending on the specific chips [0].

      [0]: https://www.aljazeera.com/economy/2025/9/17/china-bans-tech-...

      • PunchyHamster 14 minutes ago

        IIRC they ban companies that got funding from china's government. i.e. they don't want their investment in AI to go to NVIDIA but to local chipmakers

      • pests 2 hours ago

        China banned companies from buying the made-for-China 6000D.

        I'm sure they have knowledge of it being backdoored or underpowered/buggy.

    • sofixa 2 hours ago

      > Whoa there, Bloomberg; just because the USA bans the sale of something to your country doesn't make it banned in your country.

      Many Americans, including their government, seem to think that US laws apply globally.

      They have extradited Ukrainian men from Poland because that Ukrainian was running a torrent website (illegal in the US, not illegal in Ukraine nor Poland).

      They tried getting an Australian extradited from Sweden and the UK for supposedly hosting a website that contained information the US government considered illegally obtained.

      More egregiously, they have kidnapped tens to hundreds of people from various countries, sometimes on reasons as flimsy as watch model or name, to torture (sometimes to death), because a lawyer working for the president decided that's actually legal because they're waves hands "enemy combattants".

      • ebbi an hour ago

        The same government that runs Guantanamo prison, known for it's illegal torture practices and imprisoning people with no charges?

        Can't be!

        • epolanski 20 minutes ago

          Fun fact, when US prisoner of wars were water boarded by the Japanese, these got death sentences.

          When a US soldier was photographed in Vietnam waterboarding a vietnamese PoW he got 22 years of prison.

          Then came 2002 and rule of law stopped applying.

  • int32_64 3 hours ago

    What's strange in this discussion of chips and export bans is there's been zero discussion of cloud access, I guess networked computers are difficult for America's gerontocrats to understand.

    I've rented H100s no problem on American servers and there's no KYC or anything, they let anybody do it.

    • hinkley 2 hours ago

      If the CIA shows up, Amazon is 100% going to let them rootkit those boxes. They might even have a way to do it without rebooting your servers.

      • sofixa 2 hours ago

        To obtain what? Deepseek's newest open source model before they release it?

        • hinkley an hour ago

          You think they’re only going to eavesdrop?

          You’re mistaking them for the FBI. CIA has destabilized entire countries.

    • mromanuk 3 hours ago

      Yes, it’s easy, cheap and it works. Maybe they need a super big volume and all the GPUs in the same space, to guarantee minimum latency.

    • dtech 3 hours ago

      I don't think DeepSeek could do that in the volume they need

      • hinkley 2 hours ago

        It’s always the bandwidth. Noisy neighbors or part of the Eight Fallacies and the cloud tries to pretend they don’t exist.

    • sneak 3 hours ago

      You can’t really spend $500k on AWS without doing some form of identity disclosure.

      • vidarh 3 hours ago

        A shell company complete with directors of your preferred nationality is trivial to procure for relatively small amounts of money.

      • int32_64 2 hours ago

        That's fair, I'm also not accessing these resources from Russia or North Korea so I imagine there's different precautions for different countries.

    • biophysboy 3 hours ago

      I mean, I thought the paranoia was about China making their own models with their own chips. If they're renting USA models via the cloud, that's "good".

    • xadhominemx 3 hours ago

      You should really seek to actually understand an issue before you comment so arrogantly.

      US authorities are ok with Chinese companies accessing GPUs in overseas DCs because those DCs will still be subject any US export controls. Right now, we don’t really care if Chinese companies are building tier-2 LLMs on US gear. If China invades Taiwan or frontier models approach AGI, we will shut down those Malaysian and Thai data centers overnight.

      • nish__ an hour ago

        Traditional social norms are reversed online because there is no threat of immediate violence. Arrogance gets attention. Politeness gets ignored. Don't be so harsh. It's just how this generation communicates.

  • Shin-- 4 hours ago

    Good. Unsurprising (well, known), but good. In fact, the world would be a better place if the US would not use their influence to try to keep other countries down.

    • sneak 3 hours ago

      Don’t hate the player, hate the game.

      • esafak 3 hours ago

        The player has the power to change the game.

        • nish__ an hour ago

          That is just not true. The referees have the power to change the game. The fans have the power to change the game. The owners and the commissioners have the power to change the game. The players have no power at all.

          • spencerflem 6 minutes ago

            I don’t see how that follows

    • tonyhart7 3 hours ago

      "In fact, the world would be a better place if the US would not use their influence to try to keep other countries down."

      acting like china wouldn't doing the same thing to other country if they ever weld such position

      every great power would do the same thing to defend their position, its not unique to the US. only because current incumbent power is we see things this way

      • epolanski 19 minutes ago

        When china will do it, I'll judge them for it.

      • kelseyfrog 3 hours ago

        If I don't make the world worse then someone else will is such a depressing state of affairs.

        If that's the mentality, then what's worth fighting over? We should give up because we don't even deserve the rewards.

        • rangestransform 2 hours ago

          we shouldn't give up securing resources for ourselves, our loved ones, and our nations

        • tonyhart7 2 hours ago

          "If I don't make the world worse then someone else will is such a depressing state of affairs."

          its not make the world worse but simply take what matters to your group

          does that evil??? hmmm noo, people call it patriotism

          what do you think entire US military base reside in 80% of the world btw????? does US military doing picnic on these country?????

          I can tell you answer but some people didn't want to confront reality and would be downvote me to hell

          but in the end someone gotta to do it

    • watwut 4 hours ago

      China banned them tho.

      • Matl 4 hours ago

        China banned them AFTER the US first banned them and then unbanned them and a series of unfriendly trade moves by the US.

        This discussion where China is always purely dishonest, bad etc. without any context is honestly lame.

        The Chinese ban is largely a political move designed to signal that they're not going to be pushed around. They pretty much know companies are using them, (and H100 in Thailand etc.) but as long as it sends a message and over time incentives domestic development, (which it does), then good as far as they're concerned.

        It's certainly better than the EU just rolling over for King Donald, which as a EU citizen is embarrassing.

        • sofixa 2 hours ago

          > It's certainly better than the EU just rolling over for King Donald, which as a EU citizen is embarrassing.

          I'm seeing it more as buying time thing. In sourcing as much as possible in the EU is already in progress, as well as various trade agreements with different countries and economic blocs. That doesn't mean it isn't preferable to play nice with the demented guy to make the transition less painful in the short term.

    • pembrook 3 hours ago

      I agree that a fair playing field for everyone would be the ideal state.

      But let's not pretend China doesn't use their influence to keep other countries down as well, and let's not pretend they allow a fair playing field for foreign competitors domestically either.

      The US would not have imposed these targeted sanctions if China simply wanted to fairly compete in the marketplace.

      • dlisboa 2 hours ago

        The US sanctions have nothing to do with free market maximalism. I thought that was quite obvious historically and specially now. They've imposed tariffs on literally every country on the planet.

        • verdverm 20 minutes ago

          Tariffs are applied to countries that we are "ripping off", if King Donald's definition is used consistently for every country. If we had a surplus, you still get a 10% tariff that Americans have to pay...

    • xadhominemx 2 hours ago

      China has promised to wage war and forcibly subjugate Taiwan, a democratic ally and critical trade partner. If China backed off Taiwan for a few decades, I think the US would drop export controls.

      • dialectical 2 hours ago

        >If China backed off Taiwan for a few decades, I think the US would drop export controls.

        Total historical illiteracy. if only there was an island nation immediately southeast of the US we could look to for information on how America treats countries that try the whole "back off" thing

    • remarkEon 3 hours ago

      It’s debatable whether it’s a better use of US power and resources to try to stop PRC from obtaining these chips versus, say, sinking the Chinese fishing fleets actively wrecking entire ecosystems. I probably agree with you that on balance working on the later problem has a higher long term ROI.

  • bilekas 4 hours ago

    I don't think anyone is surprised by this.. And I'm almost certain nothing will happen. When manufacturing is next door to you, you'll find a way to get your hands on chips.

    • embedding-shape 4 hours ago

      > And I'm almost certain nothing will happen

      What realistically could happen? Nvidia is already prohibited from selling their GPUs to China, I guess if you wanted it to really stop, you'd need to prohibit Nvidia from selling GPUs in any other country but the US, and require some sort of government controlled license to be able to buy it inside the US. Neither of which sound like realistic options.

      So what could anyone really do, to "solve" this "problem"?

      • rvnx 3 hours ago

        License leases, this is what they can do.

        You log into the Nvidia Enterprise Portal and download a license file that is temporary valid (e.g. 7 days) and bound to the specific serial numbers.

        You transfer that file to your local license (DLS) server.

        It does not need to be permanently connected to the internet, but it needs to be refreshed periodically.

        Your local server now holds the tickets that the GPUs need to use to run (obviously checked by the GPU itself, not on a driver-level, though driver could be a first step).

        https://docs.nvidia.com/license-system/dls/index.html

        If an account is suspected of violation, they get suspended and need to pass the KYC again.

        It's not perfect (as violators can use shell companies), but it is relatively elegant. In case of shell companies, they can get caught one day or another.

        Regular users or those who don’t need air-gapped network can just stay online and the lease automatically renew in the background. Friction-less.

        Added benefit: nobody is going to try to steal your cards

        Minus: enshittification of the world in the name of politics, and Nvidia will lose sales, and backfire at the US economy

        I hope they don't plan it

        • totallymike 3 hours ago

          A government-funded party would likely have an exploit or jailbroken firmware up and run in in days, if not sooner

        • kevmo314 3 hours ago

          A new opportunity for my new business: a datacenter right off the Chinese border with a VPN tunnel into China!

          • rvnx 3 hours ago

            Better run "Super AI company LLC" from Singapore, download the tickets, send them by email, and run it in China

        • nish__ an hour ago

          This guy worked for Microsoft. I can tell.

      • Davidzheng 4 hours ago

        didn't the US just allow H200s to China last few days btw

    • stronglikedan 4 hours ago

      > And I'm almost certain nothing will happen.

      The Chinese government has done more for less so I wouldn't be so certain.

      • kllrnohj 3 hours ago

        This isn't a Chinese government ban, though. It's a US export restriction, not a Chinese import restriction. So why would the Chinese government do anything at all?

  • Havoc 34 minutes ago

    The gamernexus point about "open one eye, close one eye" was on point here.

    China instructed companies to stop using nvidia chips too...knowing fully well it'll not stop. It achieves their aim though - a strong nudge in the direction of independence.

    Much of Chinese top level direction seems to be that way - indicating direction of travel and implied future threats for companies not rowing in said direction

    As for the US side of the ban - that's about as sound as the war on drugs. Anyone with two brain cells to rub together knows that's futile

    • embedding-shape 32 minutes ago

      As someone who doesn't want to live in a country run by corporations, that first part of indication the direction of travel sounds like a good idea. Obviously, the companies should follow the direction set out by the nation willingly and not because of threats, but otherwise it doesn't sound like a dumb idea to try to unify people toward some goal rather than the goal being "individuals can get very, very rich and wealthy".

  • protimewaster 4 hours ago

    Are these chips that are now banned but we're previously available? If so, doesn't this basically mean nothing? They could just be using chips that they bought when they were allowed to buy them.

    • jldugger 3 hours ago

      Afaik, data center grade blackwell chips have never been legal for export to china. I think this has more do to with NVIDIA than DeepSeek. For a brief moment, people thought DeepSeek had found some way to produce AI without sending boatloads of cash to NVIDIA, causing a drop in share price.

      Shortly thereafter people realized they were probably just evading sanctions and ~stealing~ bootstrapping parameters from other models to reach their stated training cost. This report is just further reporting on that rumor.

  • epolanski 26 minutes ago

    These bans are hard to enforce.

    You just need any company outside china that isn't under sanction to buy them and then sell them.

    Even further, you can skip the hardware buying entirely and set some shell company to buy compute from the dozens of vendors.

  • bee_rider 4 hours ago

    It seems pretty difficult to prevent two other countries from trading, especially when it is sort of low-volume (I mean how many boats full of GPUs was this? It isn’t like oil or something, where we can see the infrastructure to consume it via satellite).

  • rvnx 4 hours ago

    Long term consequences: China outperforms Nvidia, by producing cheaper, faster chips at a large scale, by getting inspired by the IP but using their own production lines.

    Through sanctions, the irony is that the west removed the incentive for China to respect IP laws.

    Well done.

    If they can solve the lithography/ASML issue by getting access to it, then they will be forced to win.

    • codedokode 3 hours ago

      I don't know much about GPUs, but is there really any value in IP? I can learn to write HDL code all day long, but turning it into real transistors is the hard part. Code is worth nothing nowadays with AI.

      • PunchyHamster 9 minutes ago

        not IP in particular but APIs. Putting your existing CUDA codebase into new NVIDIA generation that might be noticeably more expensive but is still faster/more energy-efficient than competition.

        Competition's software stack have to be good enough that it is worth migrating over and I think till we get some kind of cross vendor API for that it won't happen for a while

    • 1970-01-01 4 hours ago

      I thought it was impossible for them to leapfrog without actively occupying the TSMC fab as it takes years and years just to dial-in the insane precision.

    • palmotea 3 hours ago

      > Long term consequences: China outperforms Nvidia, by producing cheaper, faster chips at a large scale, by getting inspired by the IP but using their own production lines.

      Unlike your typical free market fanboy, the Chinese leadership isn't stupid. They were always planning to do that, sanctions or no.

      Realistically, all sanctions can do is mess with their timelines for some temporary strategic advantage, slowing some things down and forcing reallocation of investment away from other areas into the sanctioned areas.

      The US refraining from sanctions is likely the stupid move, because that lever of control will expire at some point. To not use it is to squander it.

      But if there's one thing the US government and its business elite is good at, it's squandering things.

      • CamperBob2 3 hours ago

        "Planning to do it" is one thing, but thanks to Trump's erratic and corrupt trade policy, they now have a Manhattan Project-level incentive to make it happen.

        It's ridiculous to think they won't succeed, just by dint of sheer numbers alone.

        • palmotea 3 hours ago

          > "Planning to do it" is one thing, but thanks to Trump's erratic and corrupt trade policy, they now have a Manhattan Project-level incentive to make it happen.

          The plans weren't wishes, they were things they were actively working on to make happen. The point is they didn't need "Trump's erratic and corrupt trade policy" to motivate it, they were already motivated to do it anyway.

          The US's problem is that its actions are uncoordinated. Sanctions and tariffs need to be coupled with massive investments to build new capabilities, and the latter is usually lacking. For instance, tariff revenue (and then some) should be poured directly into subsidies for building new facilities that support critical industries (like rare earths and electronics manufacturing). And things would probably be counterintuitively more effective if there was more tolerance of waste For instance, China's subsidized hundreds of solar panel manufacturers, none of them make money and a lot have probably failed, but the vicious domestic competition has helped them dominate that technology globally. The US freaked out in a massive scandal when one subsidized solar panel maker went out of business.

          • CamperBob2 an hour ago

            The plans weren't wishes, they were things they were actively working on to make happen. The point is they didn't need "Trump's erratic and corrupt trade policy" to motivate it, they were already motivated to do it anyway.

            Yes, they were "actively working on it"; no, they had made little significant progress despite throwing tons of money at the initiative.

            There were lots of stories along the lines of https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/19/technology/china-microchi... from the early 2020s, not so many lately. Their internal posture will now be the same as Russia's post-1945 push for the Bomb. Continued failure will (possibly literally) place heads at stake.

            The US's problem is that its actions are uncoordinated.

            They are coordinated well enough, but with the goal of magnifying Cheeto Benito's personal influence and cultivating his in-group's fortunes.

            • palmotea 30 minutes ago

              > Yes, they were "actively working on it"; no, they had made little significant progress despite throwing tons of money at the initiative.

              That's how things sometimes go when you're building up a capability. I'm sure they were going to work through the setbacks, regardless.

              >> The US's problem is that its actions are uncoordinated.

              > They are coordinated well enough, but with the goal of magnifying Cheeto Benito's personal influence and cultivating his in-group's fortunes.

              No. That problem is bigger than the Trump administrations, focusing on him is lazy.

              • CamperBob2 22 minutes ago

                No. That problem is bigger than the Trump administrations, focusing on him is lazy.

                It's absurd to say that without elaborating on how anyone else was "just as bad," which I expect will be a key part of your next reply.

                Trump is fucking bad, and if you disagree after all we've seen, you're either arguing in bad faith, or you're not such a great person yourself. He is costing us every jot and tittle of soft power we ever wielded as a nation.

                Trump is the living embodiment of the old cliché about how in the Chinese language, the words for "threat" and "opportunity" are similar. His actions have comforted Russia, alienated Europe, and galvanized China.

  • almosthere 2 hours ago

      Nvidia sells to Bob
      Bob sells to China
      Bob is a citizen of Ω
    
    Ω = location where no laws broken
    • higginsniggins an hour ago

      Bob is a citizen of X, the site formerly known as twitter where their are no laws

  • KurSix 3 hours ago

    Meanwhile, Nvidia is in the awkward position of being legally required to deny everything but economically incentivized to sell as much as Washington allows

  • cultofmetatron 4 hours ago

    this is revenge for stealing their silkmoths isnt it?

    • mullingitover 4 hours ago

      and their proprietary tea strains

      and forcing them to allow opium to be sold in their country

      and forcing them to give up major port cities and open up trade against their wishes

      Honestly whenever China gets around to getting its served-extremely-cold revenge for all the savagery committed against it in the 19th and 20th centuries, some chips are going to be the least of everyone's problems.

      • codedokode 3 hours ago

        Also, porcelain, paper and gunpowder. And maybe (don't remember exactly), magnetic compass.

      • hinkley 2 hours ago

        I think that was the British? We are just getting over hating them ourselves.

        • dontwannahearit 43 minutes ago

          A quick read of some British press and you'll realize that the British are going through their own self-hate moment, so everyone is aligned.

          This is what living in the ashes of an empire does to you.

          Will come for the USA in time.

          • hinkley 21 minutes ago

            Already ahead of you there sport. November 2016.

    • smileson2 4 hours ago

      the american century of humiliation begins

      • inamorty 4 hours ago

        The opium will be full of sugar and preservatives though.

  • adamsb6 4 hours ago

    Well if unnamed sources are saying it you know it has to be true.

  • hinkley 2 hours ago

    Hmm. I’ve been out of the loop too long. When did China start getting munitions laws thrown at it? When I cared to know, Boeing could sell to everyone except NK, Syria, Iran, and two others I’m now blanking on. It didn’t matter we were using cryptography that couldn’t ship there because it was illegal for them to have our hardware in the first place.

  • Zigurd 3 hours ago

    The neo cloud providers, especially those outside the US, with dubious financial backing, that are buying Nvidia chips as if they were an appreciating asset, kind of like being a bitcoin treasury, will be tempted to create some income in ways that break sanctions.

  • bflesch 3 hours ago

    If the companies which are officially banned from owning these products already own them, what does it say about recent initiatives to unban Nvidia sales in China?

    If demand of companies like deepseek has already been served, will they buy significant volume of additional products from nvidia once it is "legal" again?

    It feels like the initiative of US politics to unblock nvidia China sales might not be very fruitful.

  • Rover222 3 hours ago

    Imagine being a blackmarket GPU smuggler. High danger and high reward to get the most advanced AI silicon to a corporation operating under a repressive regime.

    Sounds straight out of sci-fi.

    • KurSix 3 hours ago

      The wild part is that it sounds sci-fi, but the reality is probably way less glamorous

      • RobotToaster 3 hours ago

        I don't think a h100 in the prison pocket would be very comfortable.

    • gosub100 2 hours ago

      Illegal video gamers playing 3d shooters in virtual world using contraband gpus

  • Keyframe 3 hours ago

    Since they're going to get them anyways, maybe we should exchange a few for a few pandas with the right to reproduce.

  • syntaxing 4 hours ago

    Since the supply chain is all from the same place, they can get so creative and resourceful. You can get 48 and 96GB VRAM 3090 on the grey market which is pretty awesome.

  • JSR_FDED 2 hours ago

    Oh no, this will lead to better models for less money!

  • backtoyoujim 2 hours ago

    The main reason "Nvidia chips control" doesn’t work is because laws will not prevent criminals from obtaining Nvidia chips nor breaking laws.

    • hinkley 2 hours ago

      Young travelers have always found ways to subsidize their trips by selling some of their personal possessions while there. I heard Levi’s were so popular during the Cold War that customs started counting your clothes going in and out of Russia, which still wouldn’t stop someone swapping a worn out pair for new ones.

      And American cigarettes were popular in Canada in the 90’s and 00’s. IIRC the Turkish tobacco blended in was banned by the Canadian state dept so theirs were garbage. Meanwhile Americans were flying into Canada in order to fly to Cuba.

  • dmboyd 3 hours ago

    This explains the 1000s of “no core no vram” listings for 5090s If it were due to parts substitution for repairs, would have expected they would be RMA’d rather than salvaged as they’d all be within warranty.

  • byyoung3 an hour ago

    Send to Singapore then to China, it’s a prett simple loophole.

  • DivingForGold 3 hours ago

    What do you want to bet ALL GPU's being manufactured by US sources have NSA requirements that now have built into the chips and firmware interesting "controls". They know what region of the world the chip is in, they have features to "brick them" in case of war, etc. Encrypted communication back to US servers required, or if denied, then GPU will not function, etc.

    • cj 3 hours ago

      I’d be curious to hear how that could be achieved at a technical level.

      Presumably everything youre describing could be averted by simply air gapping the hardware? Or tightly controlling how data gets into and out of the system where the chips are used?

    • sneak 3 hours ago

      I’d bet good money. The chips have been decapped and roughly analyzed, the only information going into or out of them is from the host systems. Those are easy to convince they are anywhere. Chips don’t have wifi or gps or radios of any kind inside of them, and what the nvidia drivers send and receive to the world is easy to audit.

      You give the tech too much credit.

  • strbean 4 hours ago

    The phrasing "chips that are banned in the country" seems completely inaccurate. These are chips that the US does not allow to be exported to China. We do not have the power to ban anything in China, that's up to the Chinese government.

    • nemomarx 4 hours ago

      I thought China also wanted them banned to dogfood domestic chips?

    • blibble 3 hours ago

      it's the standard USian view that their laws apply worldwide

      • hinkley 2 hours ago

        I learned it by watching you, Dad.

        American Imperialism is European Imperialism 2.0.

    • saubeidl 4 hours ago
      • Quothling 4 hours ago

        Didn't China ban two processors for like 140 companies? It wouldn't be unlike China to ban modern Nvidia chipsets from Alibaba and similar while allowing Deepseek to do what they want. To win at both advancing domestic semiconductor development and also AI.

  • lopatin 3 hours ago

    Oh no! Anyway ...

  • platevoltage an hour ago

    Fine. Good. Unless you want the Chinese to be even more motivated to develop an alternative to Nvidia chips.

  • ok123456 4 hours ago

    CIA disinformation campaigns notwithstanding, maybe accept global competition, open-source models, and the fact that whatever advantage OpenAI had was fleeting and mostly squandered at this point. The tendency of the rate of profit to fall is especially brutal if you've never made a profit.

  • jmyeet 2 hours ago

    This is the least surprising thing ever and was highly suspected when DeepSeek released their original model.

    We've also seen this with sanctions on Russia but they still somehow bought a bunch of TI chips for missiles [1].

    As many here know, the US restricts the export of certain technology to China because reasons. This includes lithography machines from ASML, a Dutch company, who have a monopoly on the latest EUV processes. It's geopolitically interesting that the big buyer of ASML products are TSMC in TAiwan as well as Samsung in South Korea (and possibly Japan?).

    I expect this will become a national security issue for China and long-term you will see China try and replicate the best lithographic processes and chips such that the gap will greatly narrow. This will take years and involves a lot of depenedent industries but of anyone China has shown the willingness, ability and resolve to pursue decades-long infrastructure and national security projects.

    In the meantime, bans on GPU exports to China will continue to be circumvented (eg [2]) and honestly there's no real reason for those export restrictions anyway.

    [1]: https://archive.is/S2uD4

    [2]: https://www.reuters.com/world/china/us-justice-department-ac...

  • reeeli 35 minutes ago

    kawaii nonsense, please do some journalism and dig into some relevant stuff, Mr. Dump and Mrs. Pump

  • irthomasthomas 3 hours ago

    Related: Deepseek just leapfrogged the competition. Scores gold in 2025's IMO, IOI, and ICPC world finals with an openweights model.

  • natch 3 hours ago

    Anyone interested in the topic of whether the US can stay ahead of China should ask AI to explain to them the Chinese concepts of 空降美国人 and 美宝.

    These concepts are the reason why during some periods flights to the US have had an uncanny number of pregnant women and flights back to China have had an uncanny number of newborn babies.

    Now these babies are adults with US citizenship, with some who returned to the US after primary school and became fully fluent native English speakers, and some of whom may be thoroughly culturally loyal to the Chinese communist party. And 100% hireable by top US AI firms and working there as we speak.

    It’s staring everyone right in the face, but it’s taboo to talk about, because people conflate concerns about cultural loyalty with racism.

    I don’t dislike these people. I welcome them. I also hope they will learn the value of freedom and (representative) democracy. btw Taiwan is a litmus test. (If you are one of the people I’m speaking about, and you think it would be great if the CCP could take over Taiwan, your values are not aligned with freedom and democracy.)

    The point is it’s just silly to think we can stay ahead of China. Some of their best researchers are embedded in some of our best teams.

    Keeping the technology from our best researchers is not going to work imho. The only avenue I see is to try to culture hack the AI efforts, and maybe most of the researchers, to be well aligned as we go.

    • rangestransform 2 hours ago

      It's really annoying to me that China is in this superposition between a Han ethnostate and a self-proclaimed multicultural multiethnic society, and it always happens to be the more convenient one for any side to make their point

    • JSR_FDED 2 hours ago

      Cool plot for a novel, I’d read that!

  • ajsnigrutin 4 hours ago

    Did china ban them too? I mean.. why should a chinese company care about american regulation?

    • jjcc 3 hours ago

      Yes. China banned NVidia. Jensen Huang said NVidia is the first one in the history banned by both sides. So Deepseek might find a way to get around Chinese government ban if the claim is true

  • SilverElfin 4 hours ago

    I’ve seen comments saying that many foundational model providers like DeepSeek haven’t done a full pretraining in a long time. Does that mean this use of chips is in reference to the past?

    • KurSix 3 hours ago

      Even if they're not doing full-from-scratch training every cycle, any serious model updates still soak up GPU hours

    • londons_explore 3 hours ago

      Whilst there aren't many papers on the matter, I would guess that pretraining from scratch is a bit of a waste of money when you could simply expand the depth/width of the 'old' model and retrain only the 'new' bit.

  • kingjimmy 3 hours ago

    :shocked pikachu face:

  • nextworddev 36 minutes ago

    I mean of course that’s the case

  • tehjoker 3 hours ago

    hope so! why should computing technology be restricted based on country? this isn't a nuclear missile (and china already has those, with a much saner strategic policy than us too (we have no policy against preemptive strikes!))

    • platevoltage an hour ago

      I mean, it makes sense in the USA's head. They want to win the AI race. What they are doing is making it so China has no choice but to develop an alternative to Nvidia chips.

      Eventually China will make their own shovels to dig up the gold. I'm not sure what this would do to Nvidia, but I'm sure we will find out.

      • tehjoker 30 minutes ago

        The funny thing is we do not have the ability to do more than slow them down briefly, so this will simply result in the production of a totally parallel capability that can then be sold to the rest of the world

  • gosub100 2 hours ago

    We gotta protect Altmans and Jensen's moat. Can't have those Bad Guys compete and drive down profits.

  • IncreasePosts 4 hours ago

    The ban is on Nvidia selling the chip to China. There is no ban on China using the chips. So long as NVidia isn't knowingly selling the chips to China this is a nothing burger.

  • mring33621 4 hours ago

    ohhh nooo!

  • yamal4321 4 hours ago

    "No shit Sherlock" moment

  • FergusArgyll 4 hours ago

    I'm shocked, shocked!

  • llm_nerd 4 hours ago

    There is a sudden groundswell of reports about China using nvidia chips, always by unnamed sources, and I suspect if you could trace it back you'll find nvidia pulling the levers.

    nvidia is facing a lot of competitive threats and their moat is being filled in. Google with their Ironwood TPU. Amazon with Trainium3. Even Apple is adding tensor cores to their chips, and if Apple went big scale it would be legitimate in the space as well.

    We know that China has a number of upstart TPU vendors, and Huawei has built some "better than H200" solutions with a roadmap to much higher heights.

    So there is suddenly a bunch of secret-source reports that no, China actually is totally reliant on nvidia. nvidia needs this to be true, or at least people to believe it to be true.

    I mean, after all the fanfare about the H200 being allowed to be exported, nvidia shares...dropped. The market doesn't seem to be buying the China reliance bluster.