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United States China Government Hardware

Some US Lawmakers Want to Restrict American Companies From Working on RISC-V Chip Technology (reuters.com) 162

An anonymous reader shared this report from Reuters: In a new front in the U.S.-China tech war, President Joe Biden's administration is facing pressure from some lawmakers to restrict American companies from working on a freely available chip technology widely used in China — a move that could upend how the global technology industry collaborates across borders...

RISC-V can be used as a key ingredient for anything from a smartphone chip to advanced processors for artificial intelligence... The lawmakers expressed concerns that Beijing is exploiting a culture of open collaboration among American companies to advance its own semiconductor industry, which could erode the current U.S. lead in the chip field and help China modernize its military. Their comments represent the first major effort to put constraints on work by U.S. companies on RISC-V...

Executives from China's Huawei Technologies have embraced RISC-V as a pillar of that nation's progress in developing its own chips. But the United States and its allies also have jumped on the technology, with chip giant Qualcomm working with a group of European automotive firms on RISC-V chips and Alphabet's Google saying it will make Android, the world's most popular mobile operating system, work on RISC-V chips...

Jack Kang, vice president of business development at SiFive, a Santa Clara, California-based startup using RISC-V, said potential U.S. government restrictions on American companies regarding RISC-V would be a "tremendous tragedy." "It would be like banning us from working on the internet," Kang said. "It would be a huge mistake in terms of technology, leadership, innovation and companies and jobs that are being created."

One U.S. Representative said the Chinese Communist Party was "abusing RISC-V to get around U.S. dominance of the intellectual property needed to design chips.

"U.S. persons should not be supporting a PRC tech transfer strategy that serves to degrade U.S. export control laws."
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Some US Lawmakers Want to Restrict American Companies From Working on RISC-V Chip Technology

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  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @10:39AM (#63908167)

    Instead of working to try to hide tech from our perceived enemies we should be making a plan to compete on a level playing field.

    • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:37AM (#63908299)
      I am not defending this attempted legislative intervention into open markets. At the same time you have to realize that working on a level playing field with China is impossible. China under CCP is not a market economy, most of technological companies are government fronts and tightly controlled by the government, CCP actively engages in industrial espionage, and CCP actively engages in dumping, where they subsidize domestic products to enable below-cost sales with the intent to harm completion. When dealing with China, applying sanctions is very justified. The only questions which sanctions.
      • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @12:31PM (#63908443) Journal

        CCP actively engages in industrial espionage

        Right, so if RISC-V was some US-based propriety standard I could at least see the logic in not allowing it to be exported to China. However, it is an open standard so there are no secrets to steal and so I fail to see how there is any benefit at all for the US in preventing its companies from using such an open standard. Indeed, if anything it puts the US at a disadvantage because now it will have to develop equivalent technology while everyone else gets to skip that development cost.

        • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @01:24PM (#63908565)

          Indeed, if anything it puts the US at a disadvantage because now it will have to develop equivalent technology while everyone else gets to skip that development cost.

          Or... restricting US companies from working on RISC-V protects Intel and AMD chips, etc. Seems short-sighted, but it's Congress, so ...

          • Or... restricting US companies from working on RISC-V protects Intel and AMD chips, etc.

            I have to admit, when I read the summary my immediate thought was this is actually some ham-handed attempt to favor Intel - it's just pretending to be about China.

            But it's likely if that were the case, somehow they'd restrict ARM too...

            • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

              Exactly the same here, I thought the same thing as you did. Next, they might want to restrict US companies to work on Linux because the Russian and Chinese use it.

          • Or... restricting US companies from working on RISC-V protects Intel and AMD chips

            I don't really see RISC-V as a competitor to either Intel or AMD. Their CPUs are much more powerful, and power-hungry, than RISC-V so the applications for RISC-V have very little overlap with their CPUs.

            • One or two years ago, the most powerful RISC-V core offered a fraction of the performance of the cores in a Raspberry Pi 4. Today, the most powerful RISC-V core offers performance similar to the cores in a Raspberry Pi 4 (but there is a CPU containing 64 of those cores for companies wanting to experiment with server-grade computers based on RISC-V). Within a few years, I expect RISC-V cores to offer laptop/desktop-level performance, and a few years after that RISC-V chips will offer data center-level perfor

        • by Kisai ( 213879 )

          Honestly I picture two situations.

          Some Chinese company manages to steal Intel or TSMC's sub 4nm tech, and then implements the RISC-V at that level. While not far fetched, It's not ARM or x86 tech, and it's also not AMD/Intel/Nvidia GPU tech. It's only half the picture, and unless a company was to build a "knights landing" style product, it's not going to help.

          The other, less likely scenario, is that the open nature of RISC-V might actually get subverted by China. So American and European companies might wor

          • by cas2000 ( 148703 )

            That's been my biggest concern with RISC-V right from the start - not just China, but any company/organisation/government that develops RISC-V chips can build back doors, spyware and other malware into their proprietary forks of the CPU (RISC-V has a "permissive" license like BSD, not a "copyleft" style license like GPL).

            And, sure, TPM and similar technologies can (and do) do the same thing with Intel, AMD, and ARM CPUs- the difference is a matter of scale, instead of a small number of such anti-features th

        • I think the opinion that it's a "strategy that serves to degrade U.S. export control laws" would be applicable to anything open-source. Imagine any open-source design or architecture, including something like Linux. Anyone anywhere in the world who improves or expands it does so for everyone.

          So, in the sense that someone in the U.S. contributes features to RISC-V, they make those features available to everyone. I can readily imagine Congress freaking out about the knowledge-sharing.

          We all know that t
      • by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @12:46PM (#63908465)

        CCP actively engages in industrial espionage, and CCP actively engages in dumping, where they subsidize domestic products to enable below-cost sales with the intent to harm completion.
        When dealing with China, applying sanctions is very justified.

        How are US agriculture and petroleum subsidies viewed by competitors around the world?

        When the NSA director publicly says "Let me be really clear. NSA doesnâ(TM)t just listen to bad people. NSA listens to interesting people. People who are communicating information." what constitutes an "interesting" person?

        From Snowden era press accounts NSA also seems to have had a hand in industrial espionage.
        https://www.bbc.com/news/25907... [bbc.com]

        If one wants to make the argument China is behaving unfairly on a whole different level from other nations that warrant unique and special attention then fine make that case. Yet when one merely brings up general behaviors they are engaged in too it becomes difficult to avoid the appearance of hypocrisy unless one believes others like the US also accepts being on the receiving end of sanctions is also very justified.

        I personally think sanctions on China are warranted in response to military aggression and human rights violations yet when it comes to "level playing fields" and competition how much of this is actually driven by large western corporations leveraging state power to avoid competition? I would be willing to bet if you traced the source of lawmakers concerns about open IP for RISC-V processors it was not some organic realization but rather something that was driven by campaign donors with big pockets and a direct conflict of interest.

        • I would be willing to bet if you traced the source of lawmakers concerns about open IP for RISC-V processors it was not some organic realization but rather something that was driven by campaign donors with big pockets and a direct conflict of interest.

          I'll take that bet. What are the stakes? Who will adjudicate the bet resolution? Idle speculation is not proof of conspiracy.

        • Since you asked:

          As a European: agriculture subsidies can't really be avoided in our current society, we have them too, if you want affordable food and well paid agricultural workers then you need them.

          As a human: subsidising petroleum sounds like shooting yourself in the foot with a rocket launcher then throwing feces on what's left. But hey we subsidise airlines in Europe.

          As a human: the NSA is actively working against social progress, it is a cancer on society (one of many).

          As a European: not a huge fan o

    • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @12:22PM (#63908419)

      China doesn't compete on a level playing field. What they do is akin to the US government using taxpayer money to subsidize GM or Ford cars to the foreign markets to kill off their local automotive industries. China's economy also plays by fascist economics, which is basically a twist on free markets where entrepreneurship is allowed, but ultimately they must do everything "for the people", meaning in the interest of the state. When they don't do this, or if they simply gain any significant cultural influence to rival the government itself (for example, by becoming "too wealthy" as progressives put it)...well...google Jack Ma to see what happens.

      But in general, yes, I think somehow restricting RISC-V is a bad idea, even if the government simply said that RISC-V is banned from defense contractor spending would even be a bad idea.

      • Limiting RISC-V tech hurts everyone. No point in shooting yourself in the foot because the other guy plays dirty. It is not practical to say that we can develop the RISC-V tech and keep it out of China's hands, we would have to stop development to prevent proliferation. In the case of RISC-V tech I don't get it, we can compete whether China has it or not.

        • Limiting RISC-V tech hurts everyone.

          No, it hurts the Chinese, that the CCP mandated adoption of that specific microprocessor technology, in order to not be "dependent" on US controlled corporate technology products. Currently, there are no significant industries dependent on RISC-V products. In fact, there's no real commercial reason to adopt RISC-V technologies at all. Its just an open license microprocessor technology that can be tweaked until China is motivated to mass produce it as a pillar of their military products.

          How does the disco

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      You can only compete on merit if you actually are good at some things...

  • Seems a bit stupid (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @10:43AM (#63908175)

    Typical lawmakers don't really understand the situation.

    Just because an American firm is working on RISC-V designs for their own use, doesn't mean China automatically gets those designs. Or any element of them.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:20AM (#63908247)

      And inversely, just because a design is proprietary doesn't mean China isn't able to get that design (through 3rd-parties, corporate espionage, reverse engineering, ...). That may be more difficult than an open-source design, but it's far from a big obstacle to a big nation such as China.

    • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @01:58PM (#63908617)

      Typical lawmakers don't really understand the situation.

      Just because an American firm is working on RISC-V designs for their own use

      Typical slashdotters don't understand the issue being discussed. The issue is not RISC-V designs for your own use, the issue is working on development of the architecture with the Swiss non-profit. RISC-V isn't just some singular document that was laid down once with the only thing left to do being implementing it yourself, it's a continuously developed architecture with contribution from all over the world. Just because you're not required to upstream your development and improvements doesn't mean that many American companies aren't doing just that.

      The lawmakers are taking aim at the USA contributions being opened up to everyone, since that superset "everyone" includes China.

  • LOL (Score:4, Insightful)

    by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @10:44AM (#63908177)

    How do nationalist idiots keep coming up with a fusillade of nonsensical BS every day? Devolving humanity into some tribalist BS is not going to end well for anyone, that's the first thing. We need to science out why fools become so tribalist and evil and then figure out how to make humans docile and get along with everyone. It might be some genetic shit, maybe some people need CRISPR gene editing or some shit like that.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      disturbing

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • But that would force people to break off and do smaller tribes in order to become relevant.

        I'm not sure how you correlate reduced propensity to resort to violence with herd mentality. If we look at herd vs. non-herd animal does not correlate with aggressive non-aggressive. I mean you get aggressive packs of Cape hunting dogs or hyenas, but then you also get docile herbivore herds. You get individualistic aggressive tigers and laid-back sloths. I'm not calling for society to become a large herd. You can be non-aggressive and not want to join a herd. I'm saying there are probably some genes that

    • spoiler alert


      gene editing allowed peace in the novel Children of Time https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

      The work plays off the contrast between the rapid advancement of the spiders and the barbaric descent of the starship crew of the last humans, eventually converging into an orbital conflict after the starship (Gilgamesh) arrives at Kern's World, which the Portiids win. The Portiids decide to unite and invite the humans to live with them [after human genetic changes remove a revulsion of spiders and add

    • by indytx ( 825419 )

      Devolving humanity into some tribalist BS is not going to end well for anyone, that's the first thing. We need to science out why fools become so tribalist and evil and then figure out how to make humans docile and get along with everyone. It might be some genetic shit, maybe some people need CRISPR gene editing or some shit like that.

      This person wants their kids and their kids' kids to learn Mandarin.

      • How do you figure I want that? I am against ANY tribal bullshit including joining the Chinese/commie tribe you idiot.

    • Because that always works so well. https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=... [youtube.com]
  • We shouldn't be trading with undemocratic states in the first place. None of them, ever.

    They are a fundamental threat to our security and survival, and every claim that trade would make them less dangerous has proven to be a lie. Not that anyone credible ever believed it to begin with.
    • So, we shouldn't trade with the US either, as it is far from a real democracy and is also interfering with other states governments. You might think you're a democracy, but dive a bit deeper and you'll see it's just a fake democracy that is even more rotten to the core as the publicly undemocratic China.
      • by jrifkin ( 100192 )

        ... a fake democracy that is even more rotten to the core as the publicly undemocratic China.

        I've encountered this point before, but I've never understood why the US is worse than China as far as democracy goes. Can you point to anything in particular?

        Thanks.

        • by sxpert ( 139117 )

          China doesn't make a secret of the fact it is NOT a democracy, this is predictable.
          The USA are LYING about their status as a democracy, and the treatment you get from various state entities depends on a whole lot of factors.

          • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

            by Eunomion ( 8640039 )
            This guy prefers people who proudly admit they're serial killers over people who ashamedly hide their parking tickets. As is typical of completely amoral pieces of garbage.
    • We shouldn't be trading with undemocratic states in the first place. None of them, ever.

      So how would you deal with a state that holds an election between two candidates and then appoints the candidate with the fewest votes as the leader?

      • Whatever sanction would proportionally reflect the fact that the other 99.9% of offices were chosen democratically.
        • Not in the example I'm thinking of. The government offices were filled by people selected by the appointed leader.
      • So how would you deal with a state that holds an election between two candidates and then appoints the candidate with the fewest votes as the leader?

        I presume you're referring to the U.S. Presidential elections. Those elections are not won by the popular vote, but rather by the Electoral College vote. It exists (among other reasons) to give less populous states a larger voice than they would otherwise have. Otherwise no one in those states would bother to vote at all since they would always be drowned out by the more populous states.

        • That is idiotic. If everyone's vote is worth the same then nobody's vote is more drowned out than anyone else's, since every vote is worth the same. If anything, the votes having less value are the ones from people in more populous states in the current situation.

  • by MpVpRb ( 1423381 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:03AM (#63908209)

    ... from developing tech is futile and will backfire
    What happens if they become the tech leader and refuse to share with us?

    • by sinij ( 911942 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:42AM (#63908315)

      What happens if they become the tech leader and refuse to share with us?

      They won't and they would refuse to share if they had something. Chinese society under CCP is incapable of innovating at the same rate as open market economies. CCP social and economical policies give them greater control over population but the main trade-off is that enforced conformance is antithetical to innovation.

  • by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:04AM (#63908211)

    No need to fix the budget deficit -- an angoing problem for decades. Just kick the can 30, 45, 60, or 90 days.

    Let's focus on impeaching a guy for which there is no evidence. Maybe if we keep fishing the water will all of a sudden contain fish is not a good strategy.

    And now this.

    RISC-V is a technology which will allow democratization of CPU chip design (and if there was a budget even GPU design). It's open-source and many people from all over the world, not just Murka, work on it. Right now it's 25% the speed of ARM-64 or X86_64 in terms of MIPS or FLOPS. This will change, but --again-- the budgets of e.g. Intel, AMD, ARM, Nvidia, are resources the FOSS (and hardware) communities will not be able to match.

    Congress should stick to what it knows best -- corruption, grift, infighting, acting like small narcissistic children, namecalling, and being little shits. They should stay out of stuff the know-nothing know-nothing about, which is Ukraine, Economics, "Big Tech" regulation, and stick to accepting bribes from Comcast and AT&T lobbyists to prevent municipal broadband networks, the crimes of the ex-president, the crimes of a house representative who lied too many times to be remembered, and a twice convicted bribe taking New Jerse senator (surprising... corruption from New Jersey...) let alone SCOTUS "justices" who get free houses, boats, jet trips to vacation getaways, book royalties, but don't report on them... because accountability is only for the little people.

    E

    • Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      RISC-V is a technology which will allow democratization of CPU chip design (and if there was a budget even GPU design).

      Yes, and that's what has them worried. Right now the most powerful CPUs on the planet come from and are controlled by Intel and AMD (plus TSMC.) Two American companies literally have the #1 and #2 spots, and oh yeah, #3 is IBM. And hey, I wonder what the GPU market looks like, well looky here, nvidia and AMD followed by Intel.

      • I might add especially for my down modder, kiss kiss that previously we also had MIPS and SPARC and HP-PA and 68k and basically every dominant architecture on the planet. It's only recently that ARM became a high performance processor again since its earliest days, and that only because we began to care enough about power consumption (both to get more battery life and because we reached practical limits of our ability to cost effectively transfer heat) to consider moving away from the dominant and familiar

    • What makes you think Congress isn't doing exactly their core capabilities here? This is about money. RISC-V is IP unencumbered. That means they can manufacture them without paying anybody in America, and then flood the market with cheaper chips. I think you are already seeing this in the embedded market with the ESP32. It's really just a matter of time before it matures to where they can be used in phones, and then that will displace ARM from low end phones completely. US companies are very worried about lo
  • by jacks smirking reven ( 909048 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:04AM (#63908215)

    I get why they could see it this way, from a luddite politician perspective but if Intel, NVidia, Qualcomm, Apple and AMD, all American firms can't stay ahead of RISC-V then there are serious issues beyond this.

    Also the real issue will be China doesn't contribute back to RISC-V

    • But China does contribute back.
      • Sorry i forgot the "if" in that sentence

      • by sinij ( 911942 )

        But China does contribute back.

        In what way?

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by sinij ( 911942 )
            Can you provide me an example of research China published on RISC-V architecture? Also, your ability to read Chinese forums is unusual, as most western people don't speak the language and don't know how to access Sina Weibo or whatever CCP allows behind Chinese firewall.
        • China provides with enormous trade; you buy and are the beneficiary of chinese electronics for example.

          • by sinij ( 911942 )
            I am not sure I understand how Chinese manufacturing cheap consumer electronics benefits development of RISC-V chip technology.
    • can't stay ahead of RISC-V

      It's not an issue of not staying ahead. It's an issue of preventing "good enough". When talking about technological dominance from a military perspective there's only so much you can do. Once you hit "good enough" you don't get an advantage from "better".

      You can see how this has played out in modern tank warfare. We're now at the point where there's little purpose to designing new tanks. Anti-tank weaponry is just too damn good, and an infantry can launch 10 anti-tank javelins at a tank for the same cost as

      • True but in that fashion the previous gains from mastery of something else also leads into gains in other areas. Now even though CPU chips are evening out the new frontier is all GPU and "AI" processors where again, the leading companies are the "Western" companies, much like the US has some of the most advanced anti-tank weaponry along with the only actual fleet of 5th gen fighters (2 of them no less) because we've already built a fleet of 4 and 4.5 gen and the 6th gen is already in the works.

        In my opini

  • The whole point of RISC-V being an open ISA is specifically because of the US (Intel / AMD) and the UK / EU (ARM) hiding crap in their designs. The closed source / proprietary nature of these existing ISAs offers plenty of room for all kinds of mischief. In addition to things like Intel's ME or AMD's PSP or ARM's TrustZone being able to act as hidden backdoors, or signed and encrypted by the manufacturer binary blobs being mandatory to fix CPU vulnerabilities, they are also actively proposing adding in even
  • I knew there was a lot of dumb ass people in the US...
    wouldn't have imagine they are dumb at THAT level though !

    • No, you need to rethink the whole dumb thing. People are morons in many different ways, and old lawyers/politicians are really, really dumb on technology. The know less than their own 12 year olds. Plus you have to factor in cynical blinders -- if they think setting fire to nuns to solve the disappearing socks problem makes them look good to their voters, they'll pretend to not know nuns are not the ones hiding people's socks. They'll say/do anything, ANYTHING, no matter how destructive it is to their c

  • by slack_justyb ( 862874 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:20AM (#63908243)
    Michael McCaul. He is chairman of the House select committee on China and also has an outsized portfolio in chipmaker Intel. https://www.capitoltrades.com/... [capitoltrades.com]. In fact many of the lawmakers expressing concern about RISC-V have noted conflicts of interest in this matter. Same as it was, same as it ever will be.
    • EXCELLENT of you to point this out.

      For the lazy: "Congressman Michael McCaul, who represents Texas's 10th congressional district, remains one of the most active stock market traders in Congress. ... Rep. McCaul invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in Intel (INTC:US) on October 13, according to filings."

  • by Going_Digital ( 1485615 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:21AM (#63908251)

    Lawmakers showing their ignorance again. While is mostly possible to tape out a basic RISC-V processor using one of the open designs, each manufacturer has their own design, if a company figured out how to implement RISC-5 in a way that left intel and arm in the dust, they would keep that to itself.

    However, even if they were openly sharing, it would make no difference. China has no regard for intellectual property, if they want something they will just copy it. At least in an open environment, other countries can benefit from what China contributes.

    The problem is many western countries, especially the USA and UK have very high opinions of their own place in the world, they see themselves as intellectually superior and countries like China as backward. While there are many failings and much not to like about the Chinese government, they are fast becoming one of the world’s largest economies, and as a result they are developing a high standard of education, whereas education standards in the US and UK have fallen dramatically due to underinvestment.

    • However, even if they were openly sharing

      RISC-V is actively developed and contributed heavily by organisations. It's not a matter of being better than intel, it's a matter of having minimum capabilities. When you have met a required capability it really doesn't matter if someone else is better or not.

  • Ineffective (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Improv ( 2467 ) <pgunn01@gmail.com> on Saturday October 07, 2023 @11:26AM (#63908267) Homepage Journal

    There's nothing wrong with wanting to put pressure on China over concrete things (potential invasion of Taiwan, efforts to control lives of people of Chinese ethnicity in other countries, poor civil rights, etc). This is not an intelligent way to do it; export controls won't work with a country like China.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      They're trying very hard to pressure China into developing a local chip industry. (Not just a bunch of fabs for things designed elsewhere.)

  • I totally don't understand this political stuff. RISC-V brings to the table a nice architecture, and has been used in the US for many years for MCUs such as HDD controllers.

    The key is for US makers to keep ahead. Nothing wrong with RISC-V, and even if the US is pulled away from it, it will improve by leaps and bounds regardless, so it is in America's best interest to keep with it. I've seen newer RISC-V boards from China, even with a backlevel kernel and antediluvian software put out some amazing perform

  • That they didn't name any names of those, supposedly, making all the noise in congress?

    Wonder why THAT is?????

  • by organgtool ( 966989 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @12:04PM (#63908373)
    If we eliminate innovation in chip design, there won't be any innovation for other countries to steal! This has all of the thought and attention to detail I would expect from our politicians.
    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      I totally read the sentence from the summary as:

      The lawmakers expressed concerns that Beijing is fostering a culture of open collaboration among American companies

      Can't have that. Sounds socialist.

  • One U.S. Representative said the Chinese Communist Party was "abusing RISC-V to get around U.S. dominance of the intellectual property needed to design chips. "U.S. persons should not be supporting a PRC tech transfer strategy that serves to degrade U.S. export control laws."

    Oh, cry me a river!! Isn't that what the free market is all about? Challenging old dominant players through bold and clever competition? The (R) faction can make good on this threat but all it will achieve is leave the playing field empty for the Chinese and maybe Europeans and others to claim market share while America stays at home and sulks. You have to compete, if you don't you get left behind, and it takes a long time to catch up.

  • by wonkavader ( 605434 ) on Saturday October 07, 2023 @01:22PM (#63908563)

    This is dumb on two levels -- This is (partially) open source, so the same logic implies we should not compete with Microsoft. And Risc V has plenty of proprietary crap going on and there's no need to make everything open anyhow.

  • They're not entirely wrong. If the world moves from ARM to RISC-V, that eliminates one way that we can restrict China from using advanced technology. But it's a very weak restriction. If China is fabbing the chips themselves, it's irrelevant, but for advanced chips, they're contracting with TSMC or Samsung, so it's just one more way of telling those companies not to fab things for China.

    When you get down to restrictions that really matter, the issue is restricting fabs from selling chips to China.

    And the

  • AFAICS ARM can't extract much money from Apple, but they are trying to bleed Qualcomm dry. RISC-V is probably just a negotiating tool for them. Not just using ARM is a pain in the ass, but if ARM gets unreasonable they might be forced into it.

  • Those that do not want to participate in important stuff are doing it to themselves.

  • Let's start with the obvious, the US should ban all open source because not only does China use the tech, but are heavy contributors to it which would make the US dependent on Chinese tech.

    Should I point out that China's not-so-secret top HPCs which get bigger all the time by adding more boxes runs MIPS?

    The Chinese government can order the world's largest AI HPC from Huawei with full pangu and pytorch support from Huawei and get it delivered in weeks.

    The US can order the world's largest AI HPC from NVidia,
  • Lawmakers consider a ban on fortune cookies because of fears they contain secret messages from China. Never mind that fortune cookies were an American invention.

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