米国、包括的な半導体輸出規制を検討かと報道
米国政府が検討中の包括的な半導体輸出管理案では、輸出先国を問わず全てのチップ輸出取引に政府が関与する役割を果たす可能性があると報じられた。
キーポイント
包括的な輸出管理の検討
米国政府が全ての半導体輸出取引に政府が関与する包括的な輸出管理案を検討していると報じられた。
輸出先国を問わない適用範囲
提案されている規制は、輸出先の国に関係なく適用される可能性があり、従来の特定国向け規制よりも広範な影響が予想される。
政府の直接的な関与
個々のチップ輸出取引に対して政府が直接的な役割を果たす仕組みが検討されており、輸出プロセスに新たな規制層が追加される可能性がある。
業界への広範な影響
この規制が実施されれば、半導体サプライチェーン全体に影響を与え、AIチップを含む高度な半導体の国際取引に大きな変化をもたらす可能性がある。
影響分析・編集コメントを表示
影響分析
この規制が実施されれば、半導体の国際取引に新たな障壁が生まれ、AI開発に必要な高性能チップの供給に影響を与える可能性がある。特に中国向け輸出規制の拡大解釈として機能し、地政学的な技術競争の一環として位置づけられるだろう。
編集コメント
地政学的緊張が技術規制に直接反映される典型例で、AI産業の基盤となる半導体供給に影響を与える可能性が高い。規制の具体的内容と実施時期が今後の注目点となる。
報道されている草案によると、米国政府は、半導体の輸出元国を問わず、あらゆる輸出取引に関与する方針とされる。
原文を表示
How, and if, the Trump administration plans to regulate the export of semiconductors has remained unclear since Donald Trump took office last year. Now, we have an idea of what the administration is thinking.
U.S. regulators have allegedly drafted rules that would require U.S. government approval to ship AI chips anywhere outside the U.S., according to Bloomberg, citing sources. This would give the U.S. significantly more control over companies like AMD and Nvidia.
TechCrunch reached out to AMD and Nvidia for comment.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Commerce provided the following: “The Commerce Department is committed to promoting secure exports of the American tech stack. We successfully advanced exports through our historic Middle East agreements, and there are ongoing internal government discussions about formalizing that approach. Today there was reporting that we were returning to the AI diffusion rule. We will not. It was burdensome, overreaching, and disastrous.”
In these drafted rules, companies and governments outside the U.S. would have to be granted approval by the U.S. Department of Commerce to purchase these chips. The review process would vary based on the size and scale of the potential purchase, Bloomberg reported.
For example, a small order by a company outside the U.S. may warrant a basic review while a sizable order could require the company’s corresponding government to get involved.
This could, of course, all change before a final announcement or ruling, but the proposal would represent significantly more government involvement than the AI Diffusion rule instituted under President Joe Biden. The Trump administration formally rescinded Biden’s diffusion regulation last May, less than a week before it was set to go into effect.
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While this is the first inkling of what broad export restrictions would look like, it isn’t fully surprising that the Trump administration is looking for more government involvement as opposed to less based on how it has handled Nvidia’s potential exports to China. The Trump administration has flip-flopped multiple times on whether or not the company could send its advanced AI chips to the Chinese market before deciding to allow exports if the U.S. Department of Commerce was able to approve the customers.
However, this oversight approach may end up hurting U.S. chip companies and the U.S.’s current dominance in the global AI market. If it becomes harder to source chips from the U.S., companies may increasingly turn to other sources, especially as chip companies outside the U.S. continue to develop more advanced chips.
In Nvidia’s case, the export regulations already are hurting them. The semiconductor giant has not seen the return of its customers in China after nearly a year of uncertainty of whether or not they would keep access to the AI technology.
Becca is a senior writer at TechCrunch that covers venture capital trends and startups. She previously covered the same beat for Forbes and the Venture Capital Journal.
You can contact or verify outreach from Becca by emailing rebecca.szkutak@techcrunch.com.
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