The U.S. government has introduced a new regulation to restrict global access to U.S.-designed artificial intelligence (AI) chips and technology. This regulation targets the export of advanced graphics processing units (GPUs), essential for building AI models, and aims to ensure that cutting-edge AI capabilities are developed and deployed securely and in trusted environments.
Which Chips Are Restricted?
The regulation focuses on GPUs, which were initially created to accelerate graphics rendering but have become critical for AI due to their ability to process large amounts of data simultaneously. U.S. companies, particularly Nvidia, dominate the production of these chips. GPUs like Nvidia’s H100 are used extensively in training advanced AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
What Is the U.S. Doing?
To regulate global access, the U.S. is extending restrictions on advanced GPUs, specifically those used in AI training clusters. The new rule sets limits based on compute power, measured by Total Processing Performance (TPP). For most countries, the cap is set at 790 million TPP until 2027, equivalent to roughly 50,000 H100 GPUs. These restrictions are meant to control access to the computing power required for large-scale AI research and applications.
However, certain companies, like Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, that meet the requirements for special authorizations (called “Universal Verified End User” status) are exempt from these caps. Additionally, countries with “national Verified End User” status are allowed more advanced GPUs—about 320,000 over the next two years.
Exceptions to Licensing
There are exceptions for small GPU orders, such as those for universities or research institutions. Orders that do not exceed 1,700 H100 chips only require government notification and do not count toward the caps. This exception is designed to facilitate the global flow of AI technology for low-risk purposes.
GPUs intended for gaming are also excluded from the restrictions, ensuring that the gaming sector remains unaffected by the new rules.
Which Places Can Get Unlimited AI Chips?
Eighteen countries are exempt from the country-specific caps on GPUs. These countries include the U.S., Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea, the European Union members, and Taiwan. This list reflects nations the U.S. considers aligned in terms of AI development and security.
What Is Being Done with ‘Model Weights’?
In addition to GPUs, the U.S. is regulating “model weights,” which are numerical parameters used in training AI models. These model weights, essential for refining the performance of AI algorithms, are considered sensitive information. The new rule establishes security measures to protect these parameters, ensuring that only trusted entities manage the most advanced AI systems.
Conclusion
The U.S. regulation reflects growing concerns over AI technology’s potential misuse and aims to ensure its responsible development. By controlling the flow of critical AI resources like GPUs and model weights, the U.S. seeks to maintain dominance in the AI field while preventing sensitive technology from reaching adversarial nations.