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Nvidia's acquisition of SchedMD, developer of the widely used Slurm software for managing supercomputers and AI model training, has sparked concerns among AI and supercomputing specialists. They fear Nvidia may prioritize its own hardware in future software updates, potentially disadvantaging competitors and disrupting fair access to essential AI infrastructure.
A Chinese national and two Americans were charged by the U.S. Department of Justice for conspiring to illegally export millions of dollars' worth of advanced AI chips, including NVIDIA GPUs, to China via Thailand. The defendants allegedly falsified documents and used shell companies to circumvent U.S. export controls, raising national security concerns.
Four Chinese universities, including military-affiliated Beijing Aviation and Harbin Institute of Technology, procured Supermicro servers equipped with restricted NVIDIA A100 AI chips, circumventing US export controls. The unauthorized acquisition raises concerns over potential military use and future risks, as US authorities investigate illegal transfers and tighten regulations.
US authorities are investigating allegations that Thailand-based OBON Corp helped smuggle billions of dollars' worth of Super Micro servers containing Nvidia AI chips into China, potentially violating US export controls. Alibaba is named as a possible end customer. The case highlights risks in AI hardware supply chains and export law compliance.