Biden considers extending AI chip curbs to Chinese companies abroad
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[October 13, 2023] By
Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld
(Reuters) - The Biden administration is considering closing a loophole
that gives Chinese companies access to American artificial intelligence
(AI) chips through units located overseas, according to four people
familiar with the matter.
The United States last year shook relations with Beijing when it
unveiled new restrictions on shipments of AI chips and chipmaking tools
to China, seeking to thwart its military advances.
Those rules are set to be tightened in the coming days. A person
familiar with the situation said the measures could be included in those
new restrictions.
In the initial round of curbs, the Biden administration left overseas
subsidiaries of Chinese companies with unfettered access to the same
semiconductors, meaning they could easily be smuggled into China or
accessed remotely by China-based users.
Reuters reported in June that the very chips barred by U.S. regulations
could be purchased from vendors in the famed Huaqiangbei electronics
area in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen.
Washington is now considering ways to close the loophole, sources said,
a move that has not been previously reported.
In response to a question on the Reuters report, Chinese foreign
ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin on Friday repeated China's stance that
it opposes U.S. attempts to "politicize" chip supply chains and would
"closely follow" these potential curbs.
The efforts to close the loophole show how the Biden administration is
struggling to cut China off from top AI technology and how difficult it
is to plug every gap in export controls.
"Absolutely, Chinese firms are purchasing chips for use in data centers
abroad," said Greg Allen, a director at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, noting that Singapore is a big hub for cloud
computing.
The Commerce Department declined to comment. A representative from the
Chinese Embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request
for comment.
China's Ministry of Commerce has previously accused the U.S. of abusing
export controls and called for it to "stop its unreasonable suppression
of Chinese companies."
While it would be illegal under U.S. law to ship those AI chips to
mainland China, it is very difficult for the United States to police
those transactions, experts said, noting that China-based employees
could legally access the chips located at foreign subsidiaries remotely
as well.
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Semiconductor chips are seen on a printed circuit board in this
illustration picture taken February 17, 2023. REUTERS/Florence
Lo/Illustration/File Photo
"We don't actually know how big a problem this is," said Hanna
Dohmen, a Research Analyst at Georgetown University's Center for
Security and Emerging Technology (CSET).
The United States has been seeking to halt the rise of China's
artificial intelligence capability, which helps its military develop
unmanned combat systems, according to a report in The International
Affairs Review, affiliated with George Washington University’s
School of International Affairs.
China's AI capability depends on its access to U.S. chips. CSET
found in a June 2022 report that out of 97 individual AI chips
procured via Chinese military tenders over an 8-month period in
2020, nearly all of them were designed by U.S.-based companies
Nvidia, Xilinx, Intel, and Microsemi.
Washington has been working to close other loopholes that allow the
AI chips into China. In August, it told Nvidia and AMD to restrict
shipments of the AI chips beyond China to other regions, including
some countries in the Middle East.
Sources said the new rules on AI chips expected this month will
likely apply those same restrictions more broadly to all companies
in the market.
It is less clear how the U.S. government might close the loophole
allowing Chinese parties to access U.S. cloud providers like Amazon
Web Services, which give their customers access to the same AI
capabilities. But sources say the Biden administration is grappling
with that issue as well.
"Chinese persons can completely legally access the same chips from
anywhere in the world. There are no rules about how they can be
accessed," said Timothy Fist, a fellow at Washington-based think
tank Center for a New American Security.
(Reporting by Alexandra Alper and Karen Freifeld; Additional
reporting by Eduardo Baptista in Beijing; Editing by Chris Sanders,
Anna Driver and Kim Coghill)
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