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.
This year, China has come up with some impressive technological feats. But as 2025 draws to a close, its latest invention may be the grandest yet: a 1,243-mile-wide computing power pool, essentially allowing the country’s top computing centers to operate as a unified system.
Chinese artificial intelligence startup DeepSeek has relied on Nvidia Corp. chips that are banned in the country to develop an upcoming AI model, according to a new report in The Information. Nvidia’s Blackwell chips were smuggled into China through countries that permitted their sale,
Government push for power supremacy transforms Inner Mongolia. Tech leaders worry about a U.S.-China “electron gap.”
Rep. John Moolenaar (R-Mich.), chair of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party, warned Tuesday that allowing sales of Nvidia’s more powerful H200 chips to China could help the
On December 8, 2025, Reuters reported that the U.S. had approved NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA)’s exports of the H200 processor to China, subject to a 25% fee on such sales.
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.
A new coalition unites Singapore, Australia, Japan, South Korea and Israel. The Trump administration is forming a coalition to counter China’s dominant control of critical minerals and emerging power as a center of AI and other tech sectors.