US to deepen chokehold on China’s AI chip access

US to deepen chokehold on China’s AI chip access

A new set of regulations that aim to stop Chinese businesses from sourcing American-made high-end artificial intelligence ( AI ) chips through various channels are expected to be announced by the United States.

Washington plans to introduce fresh regulations that may limit some superior AI cards to China, according to an unnamed US official who spoke with Reuters. According to the report, the US is considering whether to forbid exports of the H800 scrap from Nvidia to China. & nbsp,

According to Bloomberg, the US will step up its efforts to see if any Chinese companies are getting around export restrictions by sending shipments through various countries. Additionally, it will demand that foreign manufacturers obtain a US permit before placing orders with Taiwanese chip design companies. According to the information, the new regulations will be released early this year.

According to Wang Wenbin, a spokeswoman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry,” China opposes US politicizing, instrumentalizing, and weaponizing commerce and technology problems.

The principles of marketplace economy and fair competition are violated by arbitrarily putting curbs in place or violently seeking decoupling to further social agenda, the global economic and trading order is undermined, global commercial and supply chains are disrupted and destabilized, and ultimately the interests of the entire world are harmed, he claimed. & nbsp,

China, according to Wang, did closely monitor advances and steadfastly protect its legal rights and interests.

Interchip data rates

The Biden administration ordered US chip manufacturers to stop sending 600 gigabytes per second interchip graphics chips to China and Russia in August of last year. This new law applies to AMD’s MI250 device as well as Nvidia and H100 chips.

Later, Nvidia unveiled the 400 and 300 gigabytes per second A800 and H800 computers, between, for Chinese areas. Both chips meet the export standards set forth by the US government.

With US device bans in thinking, Nvidia’s A800 computer was designed for export to China. Photo: Facebook

Although it has not yet announced the regulations, press reports in June of this year claimed that the Biden presidency would soon forbid the import of the A800 and H800 to China.

A US official recently informed Reuters that a” performance density” factor will take the place of the bandwidth factor to help avoid further workarounds. & nbsp,

Just AI cards with performance criteria that fall within the export ban guidelines can be shipped to China. & nbsp,

Chinese tech behemoths BAT( Baidu, Alibaba, and Tencent) and ByteDance just ordered US$ 5 billion worth of A800 bits from Nvidia, according to a report by The Financial Times on August 9.

According to the report, 100 000 A800 chips worth$ 1 billion are expected to arrive this year, with the remaining ones arriving in 2024. & nbsp,

According to tech experts, the A800 now performs at 70 % of an A100. It’s unclear if the new regulations will forbid the delivery of the A800 and H800 to China.

A Beijing-based journalist claimed in an article published on Monday by the systems news website AI era that the H800 is now a slower version of H100 but that it may still be prohibited from being shipped to China. The upcoming US limits may hinder Chinese businesses’ ability to develop their Intelligence technologies, according to nbsp.

trade solutions

According to a Reuters report from June, some shops in Shenzhen’s Huaqiangbei area were discovered to have purchased small quantities of A100 cards at prices twice as high as usual, costing$ 20,000 each. & nbsp,

The Chinese People’s Liberation Army( PLA) frequently purchases commercial off-the-shelf AI systems from Chinese academic institutions and private companies, which are not easily blocked by US restrictions on military end-users, according to a research report published in June of last year by the Washington-based think tank Center for Security and Emerging Technology( CSET ). & nbsp,

The CSET stated that it would be difficult for US authorities to launch a targeted assault on the PLA’s intermediate device suppliers due to the challenges associated with tracking AI cards and the variety of potential vendors. & nbsp,

Nearly all of the 97 AI cards the CSET was able to identify from public Army acquire records were created by Nvidia, Xilinx( today AMD ), Intel, or Microsemi. The CSET added that the PLA is placing orders for AI cards created by US companies and produced in Taiwan and South Korea. & nbsp,

Huawei is evading US device regulations. Photo: Twitter

As the 7nm AI computer uses the company’s self-developed Da Vinci structures, sanctioned Chinese technology huge Huawei Technologies can also transfer the production of its Ascend 910 device to Taiwanese TSMC.

More than 20 Chinese towns have used Ascend cards in their AI services, according to a CITIC Securties studies document that was released in July, and Huawei currently holds the 79 % market share for AI technology centers in China. & nbsp,

Zhang Dixuan, CEO of Huawei’s Atlas Data Center Business, announced on July 6 that the company may increase the number of Ascend 910 tickets in its Altas 900 Supercluster from 4, 000 to 16, 000 after this month.

An That writer named Yao Yue claims that such a grouping is sufficient to teach an equal chatbot to GPT3.0.

Read: Shanghai’s plans to develop an AI hotspot may be derailed by the microprocessor war.

What’s behind Samsung and SK Hynix device war discounts, you ask?

@ jeffpao3 Follow Jeff Pao on Twitter at & nbsp.