China, NVIDIA and AI
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Robust demand for artificial-intelligence chips makes for attractive buying opportunities in several semiconductor stocks headed into earnings season, according to J.P. Morgan.
Nvidia founder and CEO Jensen Huang has been active on the government relations and lobbying front, and now he’s got something big to show for his efforts: the Trump Administration has agreed to lift a ban on selling Nvidia H20 AI chips to China.
By Jarrett Renshaw and Karen Freifeld WASHINGTON/BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) -Nvidia's planned resumption of sales of its H20 AI chips to China is part of U.S. negotiations on rare earths, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said on Tuesday,
The U.S. House Select Committee on China has expressed concerns about the Trump administration's decision to allow Nvidia ( NASDAQ: NVDA) to resume shipments of its H20 AI chips to China.
Nvidia ( NVDA 1.06%) has proven itself to be the bellwether of the artificial intelligence (AI) industry. The company is the leading AI chip designer and has been among the first to speak of what's next in the field -- from sovereign AI to humanoid robots.
Nvidia's CEO Jensen Huang says the technology giant has won approval from the Trump administration to sell its advanced H20 computer chips used for artificial intelligence to China.
The £225m new Isambard-AI facility, developed by the University of Bristol in partnership with HPE and NVIDIA, has been launched. The - Read more from Inside HPC & AI News.
Washington has been concerned China could use Nvidia’s chips to get a jump on the U.S. in high-tech fields, particularly when it comes to artificial intelligence.
Researchers recently demoed GPUHammer, the first Rowhammer-style exploit targeting GPU memory, posing major threats to AI reliability and data integrity.