Trump confirms Nvidia chip agreement
Nvidia will pay the United States 15% of the money it makes from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, President Donald Trump said in a press conference on Monday.
Trump said he allowed Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to sell H20 chips to China while the company provides the U.S. government with a kickback of the profits.
“The H20 is obsolete,” Trump said. “So we negotiate a little deal so he’s, essentially, selling an old chip,” Trump added, referring to Huang.
Trump said he initially asked for a 20% cut from sales of Nvidia’s chips but the two landed on 15%.
In April, Trump banned Nvidia from selling H20 chips to China. The administration later reversed the ban in July.
A coalition of democratic lawmakers, including Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., criticized the administration’s July reversal.
“Limiting the PRC’s access to advanced compute has been a focus of Congress: one with a strong bipartisan commitment across both chambers and both parties,” The letter read.
“The PRC’s development of advanced AI capabilities represents a clear risk to the United States’ national and economic security, and the administration’s willingness to trade away that security is extremely troubling,” the letter continued.
Latest News Stories
Foxx: Prosecutors’ ‘silence’ on murder exonerations doesn’t mean ‘innocent’
Illinois Quick Hits: ISU union workers reach deal, return to work
Illinois Quick Hits: ISU union workers reach deal, return to work
Illinois Dems eye $7B from new tax proposals, push ‘Billionaire Wealth Tax’
Plan would have state taxpayers provide $50M for ICE-impacted businesses
Plan would have state taxpayers provide $50M for ICE-impacted businesses
Midwest takes brunt of rising gas prices
Manhattan District 114 Rejects Bus Bids, Retains Lincoln-Way with Six-Month Trial
JJC Entrepreneur and Business Center Celebrates $800,000 Federal Grant, Client Successes
Chicago mayor to push for local funding, keeping Bears
Senate Republicans unveil $72 billion budget package to fund ICE, CBP
Jackson Township Reassesses Land Acquisition Needs for ComEd Project