NVIDIA AI processors are among those who have been affected by an American rule on flea exports that have been canceled.
A limitation of exports of AI processors made in the United States to enter into force on May 15 is now canceled After an order from the Ministry of Commerce (PDF).
THE Diffusion rule AI was launched at the end of the Biden administration and would have limited the number of AI processors that could be sold to foreign countries. He had to give the United States an advantage in the race for global AI technology, but criticism, including technological companies, said it would harm companies Make the processors by capping their sales.
The Trump administration’s decision is now increasing the restrictions on companies such as NVIDIA of the sale of transformers intended for AI requests to other countries, including Mexico, China and Russia.
“These new requirements would have smothered American innovation and SELLED companies with new heavy regulatory requirements”, the Ministry of Commerce said in a press release. “The AI dissemination rule would also have undermined American diplomatic relations with dozens of countries by downgrading them to the second level status.”
The Ministry of Commerce has said that it still warns companies and the public to allow American manufacturing ia to be used for Chinese AI models and discourages the use of Huawei fleas specifically for exported products.
Some in the industry feared that the rule could harm startups or players of intermediate level, but now, the atmosphere is “cautious relief,” said a framework for the technological industry.
“While most companies support the need for railings around the advanced AI capabilities, the AI dissemination rule, as initially framed, has created a lot of ambiguity – in particular on the way in which the` `diffusion ” would be interpreted in deployment, license or technical architecture,” said Dmitry Zakharchenko, BlackA flea company AI based in California.
Zakhachenko says that the concern among companies like his did not only concern sales, but inter-country research collaboration, the deployment of AI models and cloud infrastructure partners.
“The risk was that the upgrade policy could inadvertently restrict Benin use cases, including public security, industrial inspection and transport,” he said.
As for what comes then, Zakhachenko said that some of the companies that have been affected have taken their own steps to mitigate the risks of the foreigner. This, he said, happens “both in terms of material and through partner ecosystems”.
“This includes a secure boot, encrypted pipelines, regional deployment controls and stricter collaboration with integrators who understand where and how the inference workloads are executed,” said Zakhachenko.