Chinese chips: The plot thickens

How the next wave of technology is upending the global economy and its power structures
Dec 11, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Ben Schreckinger

A 300 millimeter wafer with semiconductor chips and finished microchips is pictured.

A 300 millimeter wafer with semiconductor chips and finished microchips manufactured by Bosch. | Jens Schlueter/AFP via Getty Images

The outer edge of computing technology has become a foreign policy battlefield.

President Joe Biden has argued that the future should be Made in America, and to make that happen, his administration has moved to disrupt China’s ability to produce cutting-edge tech in the present with new export controls.

But each workaround unveiled by China represents a new test of the export control approach.

This summer, telecom giant Huawei sent geopolitical shockwaves across the Pacific with the release of a smartphone boasting a more advanced chip than China’s domestic producers — led by the Shanghai-based Semiconductor Manufacturing Industrial Corporation — had previously been able to create.

Now, it’s a Huawei laptop that’s causing a stir over recent reports that the new model features a chip that is a generation beyond the one in this summer’s smartphone.

Details remain sketchy, and Huawei did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But the effectiveness of the current U.S. approach has already come under growing scrutiny.

One recent analysis by the semiconductor research platform TechInsights found that the new Huawei smartphone model revealed significant progress in substituting homegrown alternatives for several advanced components the company had previously acquired from the West.

Meanwhile, lawmakers continue to fret over China’s progress. Speaking Thursday on the Senate floor, Republican Dan Sullivan of Alaska called out the willingness of Western financial managers to invest in Chinese high-tech firms, including chip manufacturers, “a giant American national security issue.”

To make sense of the current state of the embargo, DFD caught up with James Lewis, a veteran of the Commerce and State departments and a long-time watcher of U.S.-China tech competition.

Lewis now serves as senior vice president and director of the strategic technologies program at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies think tank. He shared three big takeaways about the state of the U.S. tech blockade.

Now is not the time for U.S. policymakers to panic.

Recent reports say that the processor in the new Huawei laptop is a five nanometer design — a reference to the microscopic scale at which cutting-edge chips are etched in exquisite detail to make them super-efficient — representing an advance from the seven nanometer smartphone chip that made news this summer.

While a 5nm Chinese chip would represent a milestone, initial news of tech breakthroughs from China is often less than it appears, Lewis said.

“The Chinese tend to tell fibs,” Lewis said. “The fact that they can make one doesn't mean they can make them at scale.”

Lewis’ CSIS colleague, Gregory Allen, tells DFD that his recent conversations with contacts working in Huawei’s supply chain have led him to conclude that the first batch of five-nanometer chips being used for this new laptop model were stockpiled in China before the imposition of export controls.

Rather than being a sign of China’s present manufacturing capabilities, Allen, a former director of strategy and policy for the Pentagon’s Joint Artificial Intelligence Center, said he sees the new laptop model as a likely sign of Huawei's confidence that Chinese firms will be able to make or acquire fresh supplies of five-nanometer chips in the near future, when pre-embargo stockpiles run out.

That doesn’t mean the U.S. tech blockade is working.

The imposition of sweeping new semiconductor export controls last October hit China’s tech sector hard. However, the blockade is arguably backfiring as the resultant Chinese investment in domestic capabilities is starting to show results.

“The problem is this was a tool designed for the Soviet Union in the 1980s,” Lewis said. “China is not the Soviet Union. The Soviets were sluggish. They didn't have a tech base.”

Lewis suggests three modifications to the U.S. approach:

First, move faster to implement the CHIPS Act, which is meant to bring the manufacturing of advanced semiconductors to the U.S.

Also, let American companies sell advanced chips to China for civilian purposes. “We’re not going to stop the Chinese, but we can at least make money off of them,” Lewis argues.

And rather than focus on keeping advanced chips out of China, focus instead on tightening restrictions on the manufacturing equipment used to produce the most advanced chips, a more targeted goal that could still allow the U.S. and its allies to retain their edge in cutting-edge computing components.

Don’t expect the U.S. to change course before the 2024 election.

Any shift that looks like going soft on China is going to be a tough sell in an election year, Lewis said.

That’s why he does not anticipate immediate results from calls for the Commerce Department to loosen export restrictions on chips themselves, in favor of a focus on manufacturing equipment.But he said that policymakers should acknowledge the shortcomings of the current approach.

“It’s ok to not lighten up, as long as we don't pretend it’s working,” he said. “Let’s revisit this question a year from now.”

 

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ai act reactions

The European Union finally struck a deal on the text of its AI Act late Friday, and players on both sides of the Atlantic have plenty to say about it.

POLITICO’s Gian Volpicelli rounded up the reactions for Pro subscribers this morning from European elected officials to major American tech companies, a handful of which include:

A spokesperson from Amazon welcomed the bill by saying “trust in our products is one of our core tenets and we welcome the overarching goal of the regulation,” and the company is “committed to collaborating with the EU and industry to support the safe, secure, and responsible development of AI technology.”

Jean-Noël Barrot, French digital minister said France would work to “ensure in the coming weeks that the text preserves Europe’s ability to develop its own artificial intelligence technologies and maintains its strategic autonomy,” echoing the nation’s concern during negotiations that the act would hem in their ability to compete in the global AI race.

And Fanny Hidvegi, Europe policy and advocacy director of the civil rights nonprofit Access Now said that despite a promise the AI Act would provide “safeguards” against human rights violations, “EU representatives gloated over the historic achievement of agreeing on the AI Act without giving assurances that the law will address historic injustices either now or in the future. — Derek Robertson

this is not financial advice

One of the world’s biggest financial news sites got busted plagiarizing content with the help of AI.

Semafor’s Max Tani reported today on how the Tel Aviv-based, venture capital-owned Investing.com has been using AI to write its stories, which bear an eerie resemblance to those already published by other financial sites. The website disclosed that the stories were written by AI, but did not link to or credit the stories that it was, effectively, aggregating. Investing.com did not respond to requests for comment.

Tani writes that the practice raises obvious questions about copyright, but “regardless of the site’s exact editorial strategy, Investing’s stories show how AI can already be a powerful tool for undercutting competitors who pay humans to write articles… Investing has shown how easily an AI-powered company can shamelessly rip off stories without overtly plagiarizing the existing text. In some instances, the AI-written stories were more concise than the originals.” — Derek Robertson

Tweet of the Day

Been @ middle of Venn b/w tech <>gov for over a decade & have never seen a greater gulf on expectations about what the future will look like re: AI, bioengineering, quantum (Many) DC folks: meh, not a big deal(>0) Bay Area folks: will change *literally everything*

THE FUTURE IN 5 LINKS

Stay in touch with the whole team: Ben Schreckinger (bschreckinger@politico.com); Derek Robertson (drobertson@politico.com); Mohar Chatterjee (mchatterjee@politico.com); Steve Heuser (sheuser@politico.com); Nate Robson (nrobson@politico.com) and Daniella Cheslow (dcheslow@politico.com).

Ben Schreckinger covers tech, finance and politics for POLITICO; he is an investor in cryptocurrency.

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