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Nvidia reiterated that its chips don’t—and shouldn’t—have back doors or kill switches, days after Beijing summoned the U.S.
NVIDIA is emphatically putting to rest the notion that it supports any industry push to equip its AI chips with backdoors or remote kill switches.
Nvidia said there are no backdoors or kill switches in its chips, denying an accusation from the Chinese government. The ...
After Washington’s U-turn, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang visited Beijing to meet officials and customers. He stressed ...
Chinese companies showcased A.I. gains in Shanghai this week. More chips will only help them improve faster, industry ...
NVIDIA is considering moving to CoWoP advanced packaging for its next-gen Rubin GPUs: removes substrate, connects interposer ...
How AI is reshaping EDA, and how it will help chipmakers to focus on domain-specific solutions.
Nvidia ( NVDA -0.12%) is considered a pioneer in the artificial intelligence (AI) hardware market, and rightly so, as the ...
At the heart of SoftBank’s AI ambitions is chip designer Arm Holdings Plc. Son is gradually building a portfolio around the Cambridge, UK-based company with key industry players, seeking to catch up ...
Nvidia leads in AI chips with strong growth and a powerful software moat, but faces high valuation risks amid rising ...
Nvidia's advanced artificial intelligence chips worth at least $1 billion were smuggled to China in the three months after ...
Nvidia's planned resumption of sales of its H20 AI chips to China is part of U.S. negotiations on rare earths, Commerce ...
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