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Tech war: China finds that US chip giant Nvidia violated anti-monopoly law

Barnsley

Well-known member
https://www.scmp.com/tech/tech-war/...-chip-giant-nvidia-violated-anti-monopoly-law


US-China tech war
TechTech War

Developing | Tech war: China finds that US chip giant Nvidia violated anti-monopoly law​

The State Administration for Market Regulation began its probe into Nvidia last December​

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https://www.scmp.com/policies-and-standards
The Nvidia headquarters in Santa Clara, California. Photo: Getty Images/TNS

SCMP Reporter
Published: 4:35pm, 15 Sep 2025Updated: 5:38pm, 15 Sep 2025

China’s antitrust regulator said on Monday it found American semiconductor giant Nvidia in violation of the country’s anti-monopoly law and would proceed with further investigation, an apparent response to escalating technology rivalry with the US.

The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) initiated a probe into Nvidia in December over suspected violations related to its US$6.9 billion acquisition of Israeli interconnect products and solutions provider Mellanox Technologies.

The Nvidia-Mellanox deal, announced in 2019, received approval from the SAMR in April 2020 under the stipulation that Nvidia continue to supply its graphics processing unit accelerators, Mellanox’s high-speed network interconnect equipment, and related software and accessories to the Chinese market under “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory principles”.
 
New government policy forces NVIDIA to violate the terms of a merger consent agreement from the Mellanox merger. Who would have thunk it ?
 
US government policy of not selling to China violates the agreement to sell products in a “fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory” way. Typical agreement signed when securing merger approvals for somewhat monopolistic products. Of course it’s really not a legal dispute but a single chip in the major country-to-country negotiations.
 
Huawei can make their own networking products so they don't care. But it might be relevant for other smaller Chinese AI chip makers
 
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