Chinese entities turn to Amazon cloud and its rivals to access high-end
US chips, AI
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[August 23, 2024] By
Eduardo Baptista, Fanny Potkin and Karen Freifeld
BEIJING/SINGAPORE/NEW YORK (Reuters) - State-linked Chinese entities are
using cloud services provided by Amazon or its rivals to access advanced
U.S. chips and artificial intelligence capabilities that they cannot
acquire otherwise, recent public tender documents showed.
The U.S. government has restricted the export of high-end AI chips to
China over the past two years, citing the need to limit the Chinese
military's capabilities.
Providing access to such chips or advanced AI models through the cloud,
however, is not a violation of U.S. regulations since only exports or
transfers of a commodity, software or technology are regulated.
A Reuters review of more than 50 tender documents posted over the past
year on publicly available Chinese databases showed that at least 11
Chinese entities have sought access to restricted U.S. technologies or
cloud services.
Among those, four explicitly named Amazon Web Services (AWS) as a cloud
service provider, though they accessed the services through Chinese
intermediary companies rather than from AWS directly.
The tender documents, which Reuters is the first to report on, show the
breadth of strategies Chinese entities are employing to secure advanced
computing power and access generative AI models. They also underscore
how U.S. companies are capitalising on China's growing demand for
computing power.
"AWS complies with all applicable U.S. laws, including trade laws,
regarding the provision of AWS services inside and outside of China," a
spokesperson for Amazon's cloud business said.
AWS controls nearly a third of the global cloud infrastructure market,
according to research firm Canalys. In China, AWS is the sixth-largest
cloud service provider, according to research firm IDC.
Shenzhen University spent 200,000 yuan ($27,996) on an AWS account to
gain access to cloud servers powered by Nvidia A100 and H100 chips for
an unspecified project, according to a March tender document. It got
this service via an intermediary, Yunda Technology Ltd Co, the document
showed.
Exports to China of the two Nvidia chips, which are used to power
large-language models (LLM) such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, are banned by the
U.S.
Shenzhen University and Yunda Technology did not respond to requests for
comment. Nvidia declined to comment on Shenzhen University's spending or
on any of the other Chinese entities' deals.
Zhejiang Lab, a research institute developing its own LLM, GeoGPT, said
in a tender document in April that it intended to spend 184,000 yuan to
purchase AWS cloud computing services as its AI model could not get
enough computing power from homegrown Alibaba.
A spokesperson for Zhejiang Lab said that it did not follow through with
the purchase but did not respond to questions about the reasoning behind
this decision or how it met its LLM's computing power requirements.
Alibaba's cloud unit, Alicloud, did not respond to a request for
comment.
Reuters could not establish whether or not the purchase went ahead.
The U.S. government is now trying to tighten regulations to restrict
access through the cloud.
"This loophole has been a concern of mine for years, and we are long
overdue to address it," Michael McCaul, chair of the U.S. House of
Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee, told Reuters in a statement,
referring to the remote access of advanced U.S. computing through the
cloud by foreign entities.
Legislation was introduced in Congress in April to empower the commerce
department to regulate remote access of U.S. technology, but it is not
clear if and when it will be passed.
A department spokesperson said it was working closely with Congress and
"seeking additional resources to strengthen our existing controls that
restrict PRC companies from accessing advanced AI chips through remote
access to cloud computing capability."
The commerce department also proposed a rule in January that would
require U.S. cloud computing services to verify large AI model users and
report to regulators when they use U.S. cloud computing services to
train large AI models capable of "malicious cyber-enabled activity".
The rule, which has not been finalized, would also enable the commerce
secretary to impose prohibitions on customers.
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A logo for Amazon Web Services (AWS) is seen during the KubeCon +
CloudNativeCon Europe hosted by the Cloud Native Computing
Foundation (CNCF) in Paris, France, March 20, 2024. REUTERS/Benoit
Tessier/File Photo
"We are aware the commerce department is considering new
regulations, and we comply with all applicable laws in the countries
in which we operate," the AWS spokesperson said.
CLOUD DEMAND IN CHINA
The Chinese entities are also seeking access to Microsoft's cloud
services.
In April, Sichuan University said in a tender document it was
building a generative AI platform and purchasing 40 million
Microsoft Azure OpenAI tokens to support the delivery of this
project. The university's procurement document in May showed that
Sichuan Province Xuedong Technology Co Ltd supplied the tokens.
Microsoft did not respond to requests for comment. Sichuan
University and Sichuan Province Xuedong Technology did not respond
to requests for comment on the purchase.
OpenAI said in a statement its own services are not supported in
China and that Azure OpenAI operates under Microsoft's policies. It
did not comment on the tenders.
The University of Science and Technology of China's (USTC) Suzhou
Institute of Advanced Research said in a tender document in March
that it wanted to rent 500 cloud servers, each powered by eight
Nvidia A100 chips, for an unspecified purpose.
The tender was fulfilled by Hefei Advanced Computing Center
Operation Management Co Ltd, a procurement document showed in April,
but the document did not name the cloud service provider and Reuters
could not determine its identity.
USTC was added to a U.S. export control list known as the 'Entity
List' in May for acquiring U.S. technology for quantum computing
that could help China's military, and involvement in its nuclear
program development.
USTC and Hefei Advanced Computing Center did not respond to requests
for comment.
BEYOND RESTRICTED AI CHIPS
Amazon has offered Chinese organisations access not only to advanced
AI chips but also to advanced AI models such as Anthropic's Claude
which they cannot otherwise access, according to public posts,
tenders and marketing materials reviewed by Reuters.
"Bedrock provides a selection of leading LLMs including prominent
closed-source models such as Anthropic's Claude 3," Chu Ruisong,
President of AWS Greater China, told a generative AI-themed
conference in Shanghai in May, referring to its cloud platform.
In various Chinese-language posts for AWS developers and clients,
Amazon highlighted the opportunity to try out "world-class AI
models" and mentioned Chinese gaming firm Source Technology as one
of its clients using Claude.
Amazon has dedicated sales teams serving Chinese clients
domestically and overseas, according to two former company
executives.
After Reuters contacted Amazon for comment, it updated dozens of
posts on its Chinese-language channels with a note to say some of
its services were not available in its China cloud regions. It also
removed several promotional posts, including the one about Source
Technology. Amazon did not give a reason for removing the posts and
did not answer a Reuters query on that.
"Amazon Bedrock customers are subject to Anthropic's end user
license agreement, which prohibits access to Claude in China both
via Amazon's Bedrock API (application programming interface) and via
Anthropic's own API," the AWS spokesperson said.
Anthropic said it does not support or allow customers or end-users
within China to access Claude.
"However, subsidiaries or product divisions of Chinese-headquartered
companies may use Claude if the subsidiary itself is located in a
supported region outside of China," an Anthropic spokesperson said.
Source Technology did not respond to a request for comment.
($1 = 7.1440 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Eduardo Baptista, Fanny Potkin and Karen Freifeld;
Additional reporting by Krystal Hu, Alexandra Alper and Beijing
newsroom; Editing by Miyoung Kim and Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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