The Commerce Department on Tuesday updated and broadened its export controls to stop China from acquiring advanced computer chips and the equipment to manufacture them.

The revisions come roughly a year after the export controls were first launched to counter the use of the chips for military applications that include the development of hypersonic missiles and artificial intelligence.

“These export controls are intended to protect technologies that have clear national security or human rights implications,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo said on a call with reporters. “The vast majority of semiconductors will remain unrestricted. But when we identify national security or human rights threats, we will act decisively and in concert with our allies.”

  • 1bluepixel
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    9 months ago

    They'll just make their own chips with blackjack and hookers.

  • @watson387@sopuli.xyz
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    09 months ago

    I don’t understand how they think this shit is effective. There are over a billion people in China. They don’t think any of them are intelligent enough to design their own? Fantasyland thinking…

    • @NOT_RICK@lemmy.world
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      129 months ago

      Advanced chip making is one of if not the most complicated and cost intensive manufacturing processes in the world. It’s not something you can just throw a team of geniuses onto and have them spit out a product in a couple of years. It’s not that China is incapable, they would just need to spend a lot of time and money investing in R&D, the same thing companies like TSMC had to do. They’re already doing that, but in the meantime the United States is trying to protect their competitive edge.

      • raktheundead
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        39 months ago

        Yeah, the West kept semiconductor technology away from the Soviets for years and even though the Soviets managed ways of importing it through grey markets in other countries, their reverse-engineering attempts were consistently a decade or more behind the West, something that’s continued to this day in Russia.

    • Entropywins
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      49 months ago

      The department of energy has been working on EUV lithography since the 90's and currently only one Dutch company has the lithography machines to manufacture current wafers… honestly western countries have been technically working on the current EUV lithography since the 60's… long way of saying it's not just smart people it took teams of people decades to get the current tech.