Nvidia’s efforts to suck the Trump administration have apparently borne fruit, the United States now raising export limits on AI fleas made in the United States and repressing anyone using emerging alternatives from Huawei. The announcements are involved while the CEO of NVIDIA, Jensen Huang, joined President Trump in Saudi Arabia this week to request AI investments for American companies.
“These new requirements would have smothered American innovation and were based on companies with new heavy regulatory requirements,” the DOC in a statement. “The AI dissemination rule would also have compromised American diplomatic relations with dozens of countries by downgrading them to second level status.”
Although the objective was to prevent countries already subject to flea restrictions, such as Russia and China, to access or build AI technology, it also placed the estimated NVIDIA share at 90% of the Jeopardy Puaces market. Shortly after the dissemination rule was presented by former President Joe Biden in January, Nvidia published a statement qualifying him as “erroneous”, while anticipating a return to Trump’s first mandate policies “which strengthen American leadership, strengthen our economy and preserve our competitive advantage in AI and beyond”.
The DOC has also warned companies that the use of Huawei Ascence Chipset “all over the world” would violate American export control agreements. Huawei’s local upward processors are considered to be China’s best response to the powerful Nvidia IA chips.
Huang de Nvidia was notably one of the only leaders in technology not to attend the inauguration of Donald Trump. His absence does not seem to have embittered the relationship between them, however, Huang spotted by putting Trump at a summit of American-Saudi investment in Riyadh on Tuesday, alongside other technology chiefs like Elon Musk, Lisa Su, AMD, Sam Altman of Openai and the epic CEO Tim Sweeney.
The Washington Post Signore that Trump was far from being subtle about what the United States wanted from the rally. “As you know, we have the greatest business leaders in the world here,” he told Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. “They will leave with a lot of controls for many things you are going to provide.”