U.S. Approves Nvidia H200 Sales to China, but Deliveries Stall
The U.S. approved several Chinese companies to buy Nvidia’s H200 AI chips, but deliveries remain stalled amid political pressure and security concerns in both Washington and Beijing.
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The U.S. approved several Chinese companies to buy Nvidia’s H200 AI chips, but deliveries remain stalled amid political pressure and security concerns in both Washington and Beijing.
ByteDance is developing an in-house AI inference chip and is in talks with Samsung for manufacturing and memory supply. The effort aims to reduce reliance on foreign chip providers amid tighter U.S. export controls.
China has approved AI startup DeepSeek to purchase Nvidia H200 chips, with conditions still being finalized. The move follows U.S. export approval and comes amid scrutiny over potential military use.
A House committee will vote on the AI Overwatch Act, which would give Congress authority to review and block advanced AI chip exports to China and other adversaries.
The Trump administration approved China-bound sales of Nvidia’s H200 AI chips under new restrictions. The move sets review and allocation limits aimed at balancing trade and security concerns.
Nvidia is requiring Chinese customers to pay in full upfront for its H200 AI chips amid regulatory uncertainty. The move reflects rising political and export risks tied to advanced semiconductor sales.
Nvidia is reportedly planning to increase production of its H200 AI training chips following approval to sell them in China.