
A group of companies that specialize in tracking international shipments of sensitive technologies is backing a Capitol Hill bill that would require America’s most powerful AI chips to incorporate stronger security mechanisms aimed at preventing the chips from reaching China and other adversaries. Subscribe to read this story ad-free Get unlimited access to ad-free articles and exclusive content.
Main Idea: A group led by GeoComply is backing a bill that would add location-tracking safeguards to powerful AI chips, while the Semiconductor Industry Association says the plan could hurt chip sales and innovation.
Key Points:
Stricter chip tracking rules could raise costs and slow overseas sales for US chip firms, which may mean higher prices or fewer jobs if growth weakens.
Better tracking could help keep advanced AI chips out of China, reducing national security risks and making export rules more reliable for taxpayers and voters.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
One of the signers of the industry letter backing the chip-tracking bill and a central company in the.
Leading trade group strongly opposing the bill and directly quoted as a central counterweight to the industry-supporting companies.
Major semiconductor company represented in the discussion of industry opposition and the companies affected by chip export controls.
Commerce Department bureau that took concrete export-control action by closing a loophole affecting advanced AI chips.
Named as one of the companies signing the letter in support of location-verification requirements.
Congressional committee that unanimously approved the Chip Security Act and advanced the legislation.
Named as one of the companies signing the letter in support of location-verification requirements.
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Sign in to commentMajor semiconductor company cited as an example of the industry affected by the proposed requirements and by export-control.
Named chairman of the Select Committee on China whose hearing remarks are used to frame the national-security argument.
Named lawmaker who joined the letter pressing the bureau to address the loophole.
Named lawmaker who sent a letter to the Bureau of Industry and Security urging tougher action on subsidiaries.