註冊並分享邀請連結,可獲得影片播放與邀請獎勵。

Ryan Fedasiuk
@RyanFedasiuk
Fellow @AEI covering China, tech, and national power. Founder @DgtlEmb. Prof @GeorgetownCSS. Former @StateDept. 费瑞安.
加入 February 2012
10.1K 正在關注    20.2K 粉絲
What the hell is going on with H200 chip sales to China? A bizarre confluence of internal fights within the U.S. and Chinese governments has led to an extremely confusing situation—whereby China may graciously “agree” to import the Nvidia chips its AI labs desperately need, while also framing this as some sort of “concession” the United States should be thankful for. Here’s what’s actually going on: Chinese AI labs desperately need American compute, which is why they’ve been renting or outright smuggling huge numbers of Nvidia-designed chips from third countries. A lack of computational power continues to materially constrain Chinese AI labs’ ability to train frontier models and serve them to global publics. But not every part of the Chinese Communist Party cares equally about the plight of the country’s AI labs. In fact, different segments of the CCP are optimizing for different security and development objectives: While economy-promoting organs like the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) and the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) generally want labs like DeepSeek and Alibaba to succeed in building and selling more capable AI services, cadres in the Cyberspace Affairs Commission (CAC) and across the Chinese security services are deeply wary of importing U.S.-designed hardware, fearing U.S. chips might contain back-doors or location-tracking features that could jeopardize China’s national security. Still some other offices—and, I believe, Xi Jinping personally—worry primarily about accelerating China’s indigenization of every part of the semiconductor supply chain—and would rather see Chinese AI labs eat the bitter medicine (吃苦) of temporary chip scarcity, so long as it helps to create a captive market for Chinese chipmakers in the medium-term. The U.S. government, for its part, has had its own disagreements about the wisdom of export control. While it would seem truly idiotic to sell Chinese AI labs the single resource they need to build AI systems that threaten the United States or compete with U.S. companies like @OpenAI, @Anthropic, and @Google in international markets, some parts of the Trump administration are—like parts of the CCP—optimizing for a different objective: A prevailing faction within the Trump administration believes it can disrupt Huawei’s position within the Chinese chip market by keeping China “dependent” on American hardware. Under this worldview, successfully persuading the Chinese government to approve the import of Nvidia’s H200s would be a “win” for American industry. This has led to a bizarre situation where different sets of officials across both governments simultaneously view the sale of H200s to China as a “concession” to be fought for and/or guarded against. USTR Greer’s comment that the import of H200s would be China’s own “sovereign decision” suggests to me that the United States probably asked China to approve their import, CCP security services refused, and the United States opted not to press the issue further. At the end of the day, China’s AI labs remain compute-constrained and will continue desperately trying to gain access to American chips, regardless of whether they may be imported legally—and this will be broadly tolerated by the CCP. Though it probably did not mean to, China has managed to accidentally achieve the best of both worlds: a captive hardware market protected from competitive U.S. exports, and a software industry quietly empowered to rent or smuggle whatever resources it needs to chase the American frontier.
顯示更多
0
19
176
36
轉發到社區