Nvidia Denies Back Doors in Chips Amid China Security Concerns
PorAinvest
miércoles, 6 de agosto de 2025, 4:49 am ET1 min de lectura
NVDA--
The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) pressed Nvidia for answers after reports of potential backdoor features in the H20 chip, which was built specifically for the Chinese market after the US clamped down on high-end chip exports. Nvidia maintains that the H20, a toned-down version of the H100, has no tracking hardware [1].
Despite the political drama, demand for the H20 chip remains strong. Reuters reports that China recently ordered about 300,000 H20 chips from TSMC. Analysts believe Beijing will continue purchasing while rushing to develop its own alternatives from Huawei and other domestic companies [1].
Nvidia published a blog post on Tuesday, reiterating that its chips do not contain backdoors or kill switches. The company cautioned that embedding such features would be a "gift" to hackers and hostile actors, potentially undermining global digital infrastructure and fracturing trust in U.S. technology [2].
The White House and both houses of the U.S. Congress have proposed requiring U.S. chip firms to include location verification technology with their chips sold abroad to prevent them from being diverted to countries where U.S. export laws ban sales. However, no formal rules have been established yet [2].
For now, China’s regulator has not announced any follow-up action. The chips will likely continue to flow, albeit under a brighter spotlight [1].
References:
[1] https://www.communicationstoday.co.in/nvidia-denies-chinese-claims-of-surveillance-backdoors-in-h20-ai-chip/
[2] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/nvidia-reiterates-chips-no-backdoors-025056445.html
TSM--
Nvidia has reiterated that its chips do not have back doors or kill switches, following a summons by China's cybersecurity regulator over national-security concerns. The company warned against embedding such features in chips, citing the potential for hackers and hostile actors to exploit them. Nvidia has been selling its H20 AI chip in China, which has been a top seller, despite a monthslong pause amid US-China trade tensions earlier this year.
Nvidia (NVDA) has reiterated that its chips do not have backdoors or kill switches, following a summons by China's cybersecurity regulator over national-security concerns. The company warned against embedding such features in chips, citing the potential for hackers and hostile actors to exploit them. Nvidia has been selling its H20 AI chip in China, which has been a top seller, despite a monthslong pause amid US-China trade tensions earlier this year.The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) pressed Nvidia for answers after reports of potential backdoor features in the H20 chip, which was built specifically for the Chinese market after the US clamped down on high-end chip exports. Nvidia maintains that the H20, a toned-down version of the H100, has no tracking hardware [1].
Despite the political drama, demand for the H20 chip remains strong. Reuters reports that China recently ordered about 300,000 H20 chips from TSMC. Analysts believe Beijing will continue purchasing while rushing to develop its own alternatives from Huawei and other domestic companies [1].
Nvidia published a blog post on Tuesday, reiterating that its chips do not contain backdoors or kill switches. The company cautioned that embedding such features would be a "gift" to hackers and hostile actors, potentially undermining global digital infrastructure and fracturing trust in U.S. technology [2].
The White House and both houses of the U.S. Congress have proposed requiring U.S. chip firms to include location verification technology with their chips sold abroad to prevent them from being diverted to countries where U.S. export laws ban sales. However, no formal rules have been established yet [2].
For now, China’s regulator has not announced any follow-up action. The chips will likely continue to flow, albeit under a brighter spotlight [1].
References:
[1] https://www.communicationstoday.co.in/nvidia-denies-chinese-claims-of-surveillance-backdoors-in-h20-ai-chip/
[2] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/nvidia-reiterates-chips-no-backdoors-025056445.html
Divulgación editorial y transparencia de la IA: Ainvest News utiliza tecnología avanzada de Modelos de Lenguaje Largo (LLM) para sintetizar y analizar datos de mercado en tiempo real. Para garantizar los más altos estándares de integridad, cada artículo se somete a un riguroso proceso de verificación con participación humana.
Mientras la IA asiste en el procesamiento de datos y la redacción inicial, un miembro editorial profesional de Ainvest revisa, verifica y aprueba de forma independiente todo el contenido para garantizar su precisión y cumplimiento con los estándares editoriales de Ainvest Fintech Inc. Esta supervisión humana está diseñada para mitigar las alucinaciones de la IA y garantizar el contexto financiero.
Advertencia sobre inversiones: Este contenido se proporciona únicamente con fines informativos y no constituye asesoramiento profesional de inversión, legal o financiero. Los mercados conllevan riesgos inherentes. Se recomienda a los usuarios que realicen una investigación independiente o consulten a un asesor financiero certificado antes de tomar cualquier decisión. Ainvest Fintech Inc. se exime de toda responsabilidad por las acciones tomadas con base en esta información. ¿Encontró un error? Reportar un problema

Comentarios
Aún no hay comentarios