Anonymous 12/10/2025 (Wed) 14:27 Id: b4d78d No.170807 del
>>170794, >>170795, >>170796, >>170797, >>170798, >>170799, >>170800, >>170801, >>170802, >>170803, >>170804, >>170805, >>170806
Gordon G. Chang @GordonGChang - China believes it can coerce Prez Trump into approving the sale of the most advanced American chips. Let’s hope he holds firm this time.
Quote
Mario Nawfal @MarioNawfal
CHINA SAYS “NO THANKS” TO NVIDIA’S H200 CHIPS, EVEN AFTER TRUMP SAID “GO AHEAD”
In a plot twist no one saw coming, Beijing is now restricting access to Nvidia’s ultra-powerful H200 chips right after Trump cleared the way for them to be exported to China.
Yes, you read that right: the U.S. just loosened the leash, and China yanked it tighter.
The H200 is Nvidia’s next-gen AI beast with faster memory, more compute, and exactly the kind of chip that supercharges everything from LLMs to military-grade surveillance systems.
So why would Beijing block its own companies from buying it?
Simple: Control. Strategy. Paranoia. Maybe all three.
This could be China trying to:
Push domestic alternatives
Tighten grip on foreign tech use
Avoid dependency on U.S. technology and imports
Whatever the reason, it’s a signal: China’s not just reacting to U.S. policy anymore, it’s playing offense in the AI cold war.
Tech decoupling isn’t just happening.
It’s accelerating, from both sides.

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