The United States has traded loud escalation for quiet export control enforcement in its chip contest with China.
The Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) announced a new rule that expands export control restrictions to any entities that are majority-owned (at least 50 percent) by ...
As drones have grown in importance to the modern battlefield, the regulatory frameworks governing their export have become more and more outdated. The most consequential military innovation of the ...
US President Donald Trump’s recent announcement to permit Nvidia to export its high-end H200 chips to China has triggered another round of heated debate on its implications for national security as ...
Nvidia Corp. has yet to sell any of its H200 chips to China two months after President Donald Trump’s decision to allow shipments of the artificial intelligence processors to the world’s ...
The International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) govern "defense articles and defense services" which are defined as items, information, software (defense articles) and technical assistance ...
On December 8, the Trump administration announced plans to loosen U.S. export controls on artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China by approving the sale of Nvidia H200 chips—the most powerful AI ...
Draft export rules from the Trump administration triggered declines in major semiconductor stocks and AI-linked crypto tokens as investors assessed stricter con ...
Recent actions by the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) and the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) highlight how enforcement risk extends beyond manufacturers and ...
China’s chip strategy is focused on self-reliance. The United States should reconsider its decision to allow Nvidia to export H200 chips and instead enact a total export ban. Yet what is striking ...
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