
Bangkok – Nvidia Jensen Huang, CEO, says the technology giant has given the approval of Trump’s administration to sell its advanced H20 computer chips used to develop artificial intelligence to China.
The news came in a blog post at the end of Monday and Huang also spoke about the coup on the Chinese state television network CGTN in the notes listed on the X.
“The US government assured Nvidia that the licenses would be awarded, and Nvidia hopes to start deliveries soon,” he said.
“Today, I announce that the US government has approved to file a license so that we can start supplying H20,” Huang told reporters in Beijing. He noted that half of the world scientists AI are in China.
“It is so innovative and dynamic in China that it is really important that American companies are able to compete and serve the market here in China,” he said.
Huang recently met Trump and other American politicians, and this week it is in Beijing to attend a supplier conference and talk to Chinese officials.
The broadcast showed a meeting of Huang with Ren Hongbin, head of the Chinese International Trade Promotion Council, host of the Chinese International Supply Chain in which Huang participated. Nvidia is an exhibitor.
Nvidia profited immensely from the rapid acceptance of AI and became the first company to exceed its market value of $ 4 trillion last week. However, business rivalry between the US and China strongly weighed in this industry.
Washington has been tightening the export of advanced technology to China for years, quoting concerns that know-how would mean for civil use for military purposes. The emergence of the Chinese chatbot AI in January restored concerns about how China could use advanced chips to help develop its own AI skills.
In January, before Trump launched his second term of office, President Joe Biden’s administration launched a new framework for exporting advanced computer chips used to develop artificial intelligence, attempting to balance national security concerns with economic interests of manufacturers and other countries.
The White House announced in April that it would limit the sale of H20 H20 and MI308 chips to China.
Nvidia said that stricter export checks would cost companies another $ 5.5 billion and Huang and other technological leaders lobbying for President Donald Trump to reverse the restriction. They claim that such limits prevent US competition from the top -of -the -range sector on one of the largest technologies in the world.
They also warned that US export checks could eventually push other countries to Chinese AI technology.
The researcher Yu Bing in Beijing contributed.
This article was generated from an automated news agency without text modifications.
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