The Department of Commerce warns entities against using Huawei chips that were developed in violation of U.S. export controls.
The U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) on May 13 warned entities against using Huawei chips that were developed in violation of U.S. export controls, while announcing that new AI chip trade rules are to come.
The BIS on May 13 rescinded the rule, stating it would have burdened American companies with regulations and “undermined” diplomatic relations with trade partners, and that it would issue a replacement rule at a later date.
Huawei and Warnings
The United States suspects that China-based Huawei’s latest processors were developed using illegally obtained U.S. technology. This includes, but is not limited to, Huawei’s multi-chip AI processing units Ascend 910B and 910D, and its graphics processing unit 910C.
The United States has been setting export controls on Huawei and AI technology to China over the last two administrations, determining that Huawei has ties to the Chinese Communist Party’s (CCP) military, which is using the technology for weapons and autonomous systems development, as well as other advancements.
For years, regulators have warned that sanctioned China-based entities have been finding workarounds like third-party intermediary companies and “transshipment and diversion” to obfuscate a sanctioned end user to obtain American technology that is off-limits to CCP military affiliates.
Chinese state media reported that Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei told Chinese regime leader Xi Jinping during a closed-door meeting that concerns about U.S. export controls on chips have eased.
AI Race
The United States and communist China’s relationship when it comes to the chips market is complex, as both are major buyers and sellers of chips to each other.
In April, the Trump administration announced new restrictions on Nvidia’s H20 AI chip, the most advanced chip it currently sells to China, from which Nvidia estimates a loss of $5.5 billion in revenue. ByteDance and Tencent are among the China-based companies that were buying up H20 chips as China made AI advancements.
He also said that “the world has changed significantly” since the previous administration’s AI Diffusion rule was released in January and that updated rules are needed “to accelerate the diffusion of American AI technology around the world.”
Reuters contributed to this report.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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