News

Taiwan has added China's Huawei and SMIC to an export control list that also includes the Taliban and al-Qaeda.
Nvidia and other U.S. tech companies are benefiting from an AI spending spree, but business and geopolitical risks loom.
America can maintain AI dominance through a new Monroe Doctrine that prioritizes hardware exports, hemispheric manufacturing, and strategic alliances in the Indo-Pacific.
Taiwan has added China’s tech titan Huawei and chip giant Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) to its export control list, stepping up efforts to align with Washington’s ...
Inclusion on Taiwan’s “strategic high-tech commodities” list means that Taiwanese companies must now obtain specific export ...
Both companies are already blacklisted by the US government and face sweeping American restrictions on access to advanced ...
Inclusion on the “strategic high-tech commodities” list means Taiwanese companies will need to obtain export permits before ...
Taiwan has put Chinese tech giant Huawei and chip titan SMIC on an export blacklist, further squeezing Beijing's access to ...
TAIPEI: Taiwan has blacklisted Huawei Technologies Co and Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC), dealing ...
Arm CEO Rene Haas and Nvidia’s Jensen Huang both say U.S. restrictions on AI chip exports might hurt global innovation ...
Taiwan, home to global chipmaking leader TSMC—a key supplier to companies like Nvidia—has consistently enforced strict controls on chip exports to Chinese firms.