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Nvidia Faces Setbacks as Major Customers Delay Orders of Latest AI Racks Due to Overheating Issues

Nvidia is encountering challenges with its new ‘Blackwell’ AI racks, with major customers delaying their orders due to overheating issues, as reported by The Information on Monday. Shares of the Santa Clara-based company dropped more than 4% following the news.

The overheating problems reportedly affect the initial shipments of the racks, which house Nvidia’s chips in data centers. The glitches include issues with how the chips are connecting to each other. This problem has led major customers such as Microsoft, Amazon’s cloud division, Alphabet’s Google, and Meta Platforms to reduce their orders for the new racks.

Delayed Orders and Shift to Older Models

The affected customers, often referred to as hyperscalers, had placed substantial orders for the Blackwell racks, with each company initially committing $10 billion or more. Some are opting to delay their orders until a later version of the racks is available, while others are returning to older AI chip models.

Microsoft, for instance, had planned to deploy at least 50,000 Blackwell chips in a Phoenix facility, but due to the delays, OpenAI, one of its key partners, requested that Microsoft provide older ‘Hopper’ chips instead.

Despite these delays, it remains unclear how much this will impact Nvidia’s overall sales, as the company may still find other buyers for the affected racks. In November, Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang had expressed confidence that the company would exceed its target of generating billions of dollars in revenue from Blackwell chips during its fourth fiscal quarter.

Nvidia and Amazon declined to comment, while Microsoft, Google, and Meta did not immediately respond to Reuters’ inquiries.

 

EU Reassesses Tech Probes Into Apple, Google, and Meta Amid Regulatory Review

The European Commission is reevaluating its ongoing investigations into tech giants Apple, Meta, and Google under the Digital Markets Act (DMA), according to a report by the Financial Times on Tuesday. The review comes as the implications of U.S. President-elect Trump’s upcoming presidency have reportedly added a new dimension to the regulatory scrutiny.

Sources cited by the Financial Times clarified that Trump’s election victory did not directly trigger the review but is being considered in its context. The ongoing reassessment could result in changes to the scope or intensity of investigations launched since March 2024 under the DMA, the EU’s stringent framework designed to curb market dominance by major tech platforms. This legislation allows for penalties of up to 10% of a company’s annual revenue for violations.

While technical work on the cases will proceed, decisions and potential fines have been paused until the review concludes. Regulators are said to be awaiting political guidance before making final determinations regarding the cases against Apple, Meta, and Google.

The DMA, which took effect in 2022, aims to ensure a level playing field for smaller competitors and to curtail monopolistic practices by Big Tech companies. However, the review’s outcome could reshape how the regulations are enforced.

Meanwhile, Meta recently announced it would discontinue its U.S. fact-checking program as part of a broader overhaul of its content moderation strategies, potentially signaling a shift in approach under CEO Mark Zuckerberg to align more closely with the incoming U.S. administration.

Additionally, Bloomberg News reported that the EU may expand its investigations to include allegations against Elon Musk’s social media platform, X, for potentially breaching EU content moderation rules.

Apple, Meta, Google, and the European Commission have not yet commented on the review or related developments.

 

Musk, Bezos, and Zuckerberg to Attend President-elect Trump’s Inauguration

Tech moguls Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg are set to attend the inauguration of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump on Monday, according to a source familiar with the event’s planning. The CEOs of Tesla, Amazon, and Meta will have prominent seating alongside Trump’s Cabinet nominees and other officials during the swearing-in ceremony, NBC News reported.

Both Amazon and Meta have reportedly contributed $1 million each to support Trump’s inauguration. Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, SpaceX, and X, played an even larger financial role, spending over $250 million to aid Trump’s election campaign in November. Representatives from Tesla, Amazon, and Meta did not immediately provide comments regarding the event or their executives’ participation.

Their attendance underscores the influence of major tech leaders in the political landscape, despite occasional public disagreements between Trump and some of the tech companies represented.