Microsoft, Google, & other CSPs are reportedly offering China access to NVIDIA's cutting-edge AI hardware, potentially creating a workaround for US regulations.
It looks like the US sanctions couldn't manage to thwart the AI developments in China, as the nation has sought out alternatives through workarounds that cannot be penalized. After the emergence of in-house AI solutions, it looks like the big tech firms are collaborating with Chinese customers to provide them with access to NVIDIA's high-end AI hardware, such as the H100-based AI servers, which can't be directly exported to China. The report comes from The Information, citing unnamed sources within the firms involved in business with China.
Expanding upon the development, the media outlet says that "renting AI hardware" to hostile nations is certainly not a violation of US regulations and that firms like Google and Microsoft are indeed involved in this business. Microsoft is responsible for lending NVIDIA's A100 and H100-based servers to Chinese customers, while Google does the same. It looks like despite China not having the supply of NVIDIA's high-end AI servers; the country still has access to modern hardware, which is why the rapid pace of development of the regional AI industry is still there. It should be pointed out that exports of both the A100 and H100 AI accelerators are banned in China.
Moreover, there are sectors of the AI markets that only deal with providing access to NVIDIA's high-end AI servers to customers around the world, with China being a primary dealer. This means that despite the export restriction of NVIDIA's AI hardware, Chinese tech giants like Tencent and Alibaba still have access to the computing power, although they will have to pay the "rental
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