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Huawei Unveils AI System to Challenge Nvidia's Flagship Model
Huawei Unveils AI System to Challenge Nvidia's Flagship Model

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Huawei Unveils AI System to Challenge Nvidia's Flagship Model

At the World Artificial Intelligence Conference, Huawei Technologies showed out its CloudMatrix 384 system, which they made a great deal out of. This system is made to do a lot of AI calculations quickly. The company is advertising the new device as a direct competitor to Nvidia's (NVDA, Financials) GB200 NVL72. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Signs with NVDA. The CloudMatrix 384 system features 384 of Huawei's Ascend 910C chips, yet Nvidia's top product has only 72 chips. SemiAnalysis, a company that studies semiconductors, says that the architecture lets the system perform better overall, even though the per-chip measurements are lower. Dylan Patel of SemiAnalysis said in April that Huawei's design choices, like its supernode chip networking technology, could give them an advantage in performance. Zhang Pingan, the CEO of Huawei Cloud, announced in June that the system is already running on Huawei's cloud platform. The launch underscores how significant Huawei is becoming in China's AI chip business, especially since the U.S. has limited exports. In May, Jensen Huang, the CEO of Nvidia, told Bloomberg that Huawei was moving quite fast. He used the CloudMatrix project as an example. Experts in the area think that Huawei's system is a strategic effort to make the company less dependent on other companies for AI infrastructure, which is vital for China's bigger tech aspirations. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

Spain confirms using Huawei to store judicial wiretaps, denies security risk
Spain confirms using Huawei to store judicial wiretaps, denies security risk

Straits Times

time18-07-2025

  • Business
  • Straits Times

Spain confirms using Huawei to store judicial wiretaps, denies security risk

Spain said it only relies on Huawei Technologies to operate part of its wiretapping system, and dismissed any security risks. MADRID – Spain said it only relies on Huawei Technologies to operate part of its wiretapping system, and dismissed any security risks. Huawei storage within the so-called Sitel judicial wiretapping system 'represents a minor part of a watertight, audited, isolated and certified system in compliance with the national high-level security scheme,' a government official said in a statement on July 18 in response to questions from Bloomberg News. The comments follow recent media reports saying that the government uses Huawei technology to help operate Sitel. The reports led US Senator Tom Cotton and Representative Rick Crawford to write to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard earlier this week to request that Washington pull back on sharing intelligence with Spain. Even though Spain has moved away from Huawei as a 5G network vendor, the country's reliance on the company for a key intelligence function creates a gaping security concern for the the US and its allies, Mr Cotton wrote. In July 18's statement, Spain's government said its intelligence agency CNI is not included in the Huawei contract and that Huawei equipment is not used for any classified information. Sitel is used by security forces that report to the interior affairs ministry. 'The Sitel system is completely isolated from any external environment and continuously monitored by a dedicated cybersecurity team with capabilities in traffic analysis, network management and perimeter security capabilities, supported by cybersecurity personnel' from the security forces, the government said. 'The integration of Huawei-branded storage into Sitel has therefore not posed any risk to the system's security.' European countries are increasingly moving to exclude Huawei and other telecom vendors with ties to hostile governments from their networks. Germany, Portugal, the UK, Sweden and France have already taken steps to block equipment seen as a security risk based on its country of origin. Equipment made by Huawei and other Chinese vendors has also been blacklisted in the US. BLOOMBERG

US Must Limit Intel-Sharing With Spain Over Huawei Concern, Cotton Says
US Must Limit Intel-Sharing With Spain Over Huawei Concern, Cotton Says

Bloomberg

time17-07-2025

  • Politics
  • Bloomberg

US Must Limit Intel-Sharing With Spain Over Huawei Concern, Cotton Says

The US should pull back on sharing intelligence with Spain, given that the country allegedly relies on Chinese network vendor Huawei Technologies Co. to support its wiretap system, according to the head of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas wrote to Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard on Wednesday, citing reporting by Spanish news outlet The Objective that said the country's interior ministry paid Huawei €12.3 million ($14.6 million) to store and manage judicial wiretaps.

How much should a Tsinghua university graduate be making?
How much should a Tsinghua university graduate be making?

Straits Times

time17-07-2025

  • Business
  • Straits Times

How much should a Tsinghua university graduate be making?

As China's talent pool broadens and society becomes more diverse, that linkage is being shaken. A Tsinghua diploma is no longer so special, says the writer. It's post-graduation season in China. Tiger Moms are naturally comparing notes on the salaries of fresh alumni from top universities. What kind of return might they expect, after spending years – and sometimes a fortune – demanding academic excellence from their offspring? A doctor friend told me recently that her son got a job at Huawei Technologies, considered one of the most prestigious employers in China. The young man studied computer science at Tsinghua University and then Brown University in the US. Huawei is starting him at 400,000 yuan (US$55,689) a year, the parent beamed.

Trump softens tone on China to secure Xi summit and a trade deal
Trump softens tone on China to secure Xi summit and a trade deal

Business Times

time17-07-2025

  • Business
  • Business Times

Trump softens tone on China to secure Xi summit and a trade deal

[HONG KONG] US President Donald Trump has dialled down his confrontational tone with China in an effort to secure a summit with counterpart Xi Jinping and a trade deal with the world's second-largest economy, sources familiar with internal deliberations said. Six months into his second term, Trump has softened his harsh campaign rhetoric that focused on the US's massive trade deficit with China and resulting job losses. The warmer posture contrasts with his threats against other trading partners to ravage their economies with crushing tariffs. Trump is now focused on cutting purchase deals with Beijing, similar to one he forged during his first term, and celebrating quick wins instead of addressing the root causes of the trade imbalances. China posted a record trade surplus in the first half of the year amid booming exports. On Tuesday (Jul 15), the US president said he would be fighting China 'in a very friendly fashion'. In meetings with his staff, Trump is often the least hawkish voice in the room, some of the sources said. Administration officials stressed that Trump has always liked Xi personally and pointed to moments in his first term when he nevertheless imposed sweeping restrictions on Huawei Technologies and tariffs on the majority of Chinese exports. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Trump's fluid playbook and his departure from promised hawkish policies have worried policymakers inside his administration as well as outside advisers, the sources said. This week only exacerbated concerns that previous US red lines with China are now negotiable. Allowing Nvidia to sell its China-focused, less-advanced H20 chip once again – something multiple senior officials had said was not on the table – reversed the administration's own stated approach of keeping the most critical American technologies out of Beijing's hands. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent last month cited H20 controls as evidence of the administration's toughness on China when pressed by senators who worried the US could trade advanced semiconductors for the Asian country's rare-earth minerals. While the US will still require approval for such exports, a restriction former president Joe Biden declined to impose, some Trump officials have privately objected to granting licenses they say will only embolden China's tech champions, the sources said. Others have argued successfully that allowing Nvidia to compete with Huawei on its own turf is essential to winning the AI race with China. That view, championed by Nvidia chief executive officer Jensen Huang, has gained traction inside the administration, sources familiar with the matter said. 'Productive' talks Trump has the final say in all trade decisions, an administration spokesperson said. The president has 'consistently fought to level the playing field for American workers and industries, and the Administration continues to have productive discussions with all of our trading partners', White House spokesperson Kush Desai said. In a further effort to ease tensions, US officials are preparing to delay an Aug 12 deadline when US tariffs on China are set to snap back to 145 per cent after the expiration of a 90-day truce. Bessent signalled in a Bloomberg Television interview this week that the deadline was flexible. One source familiar with the plans said the tariff truce could be extended another three months. This comes as Trump is rolling out duties for other countries, including key allies, and threatening more actions on industries including pharmaceuticals and semiconductors. Last week, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said a summit between Trump and Xi is likely. Rubio, once among the staunchest China hawks in the Senate, said he had a 'very constructive and positive' sit-down Friday with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Some administration officials, meanwhile, are focused on getting China to agree to purchase some volume of to-be-determined US goods and services, sources familiar with the matter said. That could satisfy Trump's concerns about the trade deficit but will not do much to close the yawning trade gap over the longer term. Trump's gentler handling of China is causing a rift among his advisers. Some members of his trade team want to hold a tough line against Beijing and have promised privately that export controls would never be part of trade discussions, sources familiar with their deliberations said. Yet during last month's trade talks in London, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick openly said that recent export controls, officially justified on the basis of national security, were also designed to 'annoy' Beijing. And this week, he, along with Bessent and White House AI and Crypto Czar David Sacks, said plainly that allowing some less-advanced Nvidia chip sales to China is indeed part of ongoing trade negotiations. This development is raising questions about how far Trump would go in negotiating away national security actions if the Chinese demanded it. Some hawkish advisers fear that a further rollback of chip controls is now inevitable, sources familiar with the matter said. Others have maintained that allowing sales of H20s, which are far less capable than Nvidia's best models, is a far cry from exporting that leading-edge hardware, which they say is not up for discussion. 'You want to sell the Chinese enough that their developers get addicted to the American technology stack,' Lutnick said on Tuesday on CNBC. Closely watching the situation are allies and companies across Europe and Asia whose help the US wants to squeeze China's tech sector. Government and industry officials in those regions have gotten the message that Washington's strategy is subject to change, sources familiar with the matter said. A half-dozen tech industry officials who've interacted with Trump's team on China said they often leave meetings wanting details only to see core goals evolve in later discussions. Surprise reversals In many cases, those in charge of China tech policy have made decisions without involving offices that historically have played a role. Restrictions imposed in May on sales of chip design software to China, which have since been reversed, were part of a raft of Commerce Department measures that came as a surprise to many within the administration, Bloomberg has reported. The decision on H20 chips was also tightly held, sources familiar with the matter said. Other actions that have been under consideration for months, including sanctions on Chinese chip giants and an effort to slap curbs on Chinese tech subsidiaries, have been delayed as officials pursue a trade deal. But Trump is also known for reversing course on China often and sometimes quickly after taking a position, as was the case when he fulfilled Xi's personal request to lift sanctions on Chinese telecom giant ZTE in 2018. He's also susceptible to criticism of his approach, which might indicate Trump could change his tone yet again. 'President Trump is set on a China deal, but it may be short-lived,' said Derek Scissors, a China expert at the American Enterprise Institute. 'The US trade deficit is well higher to date this year and the new budget will boost demand for imports in the fourth quarter. If a record 2025 trade deficit gets reported, all bets are off, including with China.' Beijing has made no secret that it believes it has the upper hand. In London, US officials were taken aback by their Chinese counterparts' gloating over the position they find themselves in, sources familiar with the exchange said. The Asian country's leverage stems from its grip on rare earth magnets and its ability to weaponise America's dependence on those supplies. China now requires companies to hand over sensitive data and reapply for rare-earth export licenses every six months. BLOOMBERG

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