Back to home

Articles tagged with "AI, Legislation, ExportControl"

Congress wants veto power over Trump administration for AI chip exports — new proposed AI Overwatch Act would shift ultimate control of high-performance chip exports

Congress wants veto power over Trump administration for AI chip exports — new proposed AI Overwatch Act would shift ultimate control of high-performance chip exports

The U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee has moved forward with the AI Overwatch Act, which would shift control of high-performance AI chip exports to adversary nations from the executive branch to Congress. This bill, part of the SAFE Chips Act family, aims to restrict shipments of advanced AI processors to countries like China, Iran, North Korea, and Russia. If passed, the AI Overwatch Act would grant Congress veto power over exports of certain high-performance chips, allowing them to block sales to specific entities even if approved by the executive branch. Additionally, the legislation introduces a framework for trusted U.S. persons to operate restricted AI GPUs abroad under strict conditions, ensuring ongoing control and oversight of AI capabilities.

Tom's Hardware
Senators lobby for SAFE Chips Act, which would curb leading-edge AI chip exports to China — proposed bill would restrict AMD and Nvidia to H20/MI308-class accelerator sales until 2028

Senators lobby for SAFE Chips Act, which would curb leading-edge AI chip exports to China — proposed bill would restrict AMD and Nvidia to H20/MI308-class accelerator sales until 2028

A bipartisan group of U.S. senators is pushing for the SAFE Chips Act, which aims to restrict leading-edge AI chip exports to China by AMD and Nvidia until 2028, limiting sales to H20/MI308-class accelerators. The bill excludes consumer and gaming hardware from the regulation, allowing the sale of high-end GPUs to adversary countries. The proposed legislation sets specific performance metrics for advanced processors, with potential adjustments after 30 months with committee approval. Nvidia has been lobbying for looser export controls to China, arguing that selling performance-capped GPUs maintains U.S. technology dependence and leadership in high-performance AI computing.

Tom's Hardware

No more articles to load

We use cookies

We use cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. For more information on how we use cookies, please see our cookie policy.