China, Huang and NVIDIA
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Nvidia said it has filed applications to resume selling H20 GPUs in China and has received assurances that licenses will be granted.
Amid strained bilateral relations, tech titan says many US-educated Chinese researchers are being lured home by vibrant market opportunities.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says AI won't erase jobs but will transform how we work — starting with how we think and ask questions.
Jensen Huang, the chipmaker’s chief executive, is trying to balance his company’s interests as the United States and China compete for supremacy in artificial intelligence.
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Huang’s comments stand in stark contrast to those of Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, who said AI could eliminate half of all entry-level white collar jobs and spike unemployment by double digits over the next five years. Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has also warned AI will reduce the company’s total corporate workforce.
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Nvidia stock is jumping today following announcements that the Trump administration will allow the company's H20 processor and other hardware to be sold in China. The approval of the export licenses for the company's AI hardware is an unexpected development -- and a big win for CEO Jensen Huang.
The tech giants said they can resume selling high-end semiconductors to China, in what appears to be a major about-face for the Trump administration.
President Donald Trump’s administration has barred Nvidia Corp. from selling its H20 chip in China, an escalation of Washington’s tech battle with Beijing that will cost the company billions of dollars and hamstring a product line it explicitly designed to comply with previous US curbs.