NVIDIA AI chips worth $1B smuggled into China
Digest more
Nvidia ( NVDA -0.12%) is considered a pioneer in the artificial intelligence (AI) hardware market, and rightly so, as the chip designer's graphics processing units (GPUs) have allowed cloud computing companies and others to train AI models and run inference applications.
China's Huawei Technologies showed off an AI computing system on Saturday that one industry expert has said rivals Nvidia's most advanced offering, as the Chinese technology giant seeks to capture market share in the country's growing artificial intelligence sector.
This AI giant dominates the market, and despite its explosive growth, the stock might be cheaper than you think.
In automotive, MediaTek’s Dimensity Auto cockpit platform now integrates Nvidia RTX GPUs for advanced in-vehicle graphics and compute tasks. On the edge AI front, Nvidia’s TAO toolkit works alongside MediaTek’s NeuroPilot SDK, streamlining model training and deployment.
An investigation has revealed that $1 billion worth of restricted NVIDIA AI GPUs were smuggled into China over a three-month period.
The leaders of America’s chip giants cheered the president’s artificial intelligence orders, which could help boost the domestic semiconductor industry.
Europe has fallen behind China and the US in the development of AI capacity, producing less than 1% of the world’s semiconductors needed for AI. But the EU hopes to produce 20% of the world’s semiconductors by 2030.
A critical flaw in NVIDIA's AI container toolkit (CVE-2025-23266) allows full host takeover, posing serious risks to cloud-based AI services.
Months after Oregon signed an agreement with the computer chip company Nvidia to educate K-12 and college students about artificial intelligence, details about how AI concepts and “AI literacy” will be taught to children as young as 5 remain unclear.