The ethnographic US government agrees that implementing strong export controls on domestic AI chips will help the United States compete in the AIC competition against China. However, the company is suggesting a few tweets on the proposed restrictions.
Ethnically released a Blog post On Wednesday, the company noted the “structure for the expansion of artificial intelligence” “view” “view” “view” “view” “” view of the US Commerce Department before the implementation of the interim rule on May 7 “.
The structure was suggested by the outgoing President Joe Biden in January, and it meant to encourage AI Chip export control for national protection and to ensure US domination in AI. It has divided the countries of the world into three levels, each level has its own guidelines and restrictions.
Tires 3, the most limited level, which includes countries affected by extensive export controls such as Russia and China, will face additional restrictions. Tear 2 countries, such as Mexico and Portugal, were covered by export restrictions for the first time and would have caps on how many chips they could buy. 1 countries such as Japan and South Korea will continue without export ban.
When these restrictions were proposed in January, the semiconductor giant Nvidia To publish a statement Calling them “unprecedented and stray” and advise them to “derail” global innovations.
Obviously US-based AI companies, like anthropologists, will not agree. In its blog post, Lab has expressed support on broad strokes for restrictions.
The anthropologist, however, suggested Low Chips level 2 countries can purchase without reviewing and instead encourage these countries to avoid smuggling and increase US control by the government to buy more chips from the government.
The company also thinks that the US government’s funds should be raised to ensure that these export controls have been properly implemented.
This statement is not particularly surprising this statement. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodai is one of the more vocal AI leaders in favor of export ban. Amodai wrote an OP-Aid Wall Street Journal In January about why more powerful chip export control is needed in the United States.
TechCrunch has reached an ethnographic for further information.
