
Nvidia’s RTX6000D Struggles in Chinese Mainland Market
Nvidia’s RTX6000D AI chip faces tepid demand in the Chinese mainland due to high price and weaker performance versus cheaper grey-market rivals.
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Nvidia’s RTX6000D AI chip faces tepid demand in the Chinese mainland due to high price and weaker performance versus cheaper grey-market rivals.
Sen. Tom Cotton’s new Chip Security Act would mandate location-tracking hardware in advanced AI chips to curb the Chinese mainland’s tech access, sparking debate over supply chains and digital security.
Allegations of hidden flaws and government backdoors in U.S. chips are eroding global tech trust and fueling calls for more sovereignty in defense and AI systems.
China opposes the U.S. for politicizing tech and trade issues after two Chinese nationals were charged over sending Nvidia AI chips to China.
Nvidia is summoned by China’s cyberspace watchdog over security risks in its H20 chips, fueling debates on tech safety and tracking features.
Trump admin plans to scrap Biden-era tiered AI chip export rules, eyeing a global licensing model that could reshape tech trade.