NVIDIA Can Sell H200 AI Chips to China
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Investors are plowing money into Chinese companies involved in AI despite growing competition between Washington and Beijing over the technology.
Welcome to Tech In Depth, our daily newsletter about the business of tech from Bloomberg’s journalists around the world. Today, Vlad Savov recaps a deep dive report from Bloomberg Intelligence on China’s AI scene.
Three CFR experts discuss President Donald Trump’s decision to allow Nvidia to sell advanced AI chip sales to China and what implications it could have for the future of AI, U.S. national security
Canadian tech startup Cohere's CEO Aidan Gomez said on Thursday the U.S. and Canada hold an "incredible position" to partner with economies adopting AI around the world, putting the countries in the lead against China in the global AI race.
Chinese OpenAI challenger Zhipu has hit a key revenue milestone and grown users of its fledgling AI development tools business, hoping the fast-growing service will propel an upcoming stock market debut.
Government push for power supremacy transforms Inner Mongolia. Tech leaders worry about a U.S.-China “electron gap.”
Fueled by AI ambition and the promise of glory, Silicon Valley is embracing punishing hours that China has rejected as exploitative.
Donald Trump’s decision to allow Nvidia Corp. to sell advanced chips to China marks more than just a shift in US tech policy. It also raises questions about how far he’ll go to steady ties with Xi Jinping.