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United States China Privacy

US Senator Introduces Bill Calling For Location-Tracking on AI Chips To Limit China Access (reuters.com) 49

A U.S. senator introduced a bill on Friday that would direct the Commerce Department to require location verification mechanisms for export-controlled AI chips, in an effort to curb China's access to advanced semiconductor technology. From a report: Called the "Chip Security Act," the bill calls for AI chips under export regulations, and products containing those chips, to be fitted with location-tracking systems to help detect diversion, smuggling or other unauthorized use of the product.

"With these enhanced security measures, we can continue to expand access to U.S. technology without compromising our national security," Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas said. The bill also calls for companies exporting the AI chips to report to the Bureau of Industry and Security if their products have been diverted away from their intended location or subject to tampering attempts.

US Senator Introduces Bill Calling For Location-Tracking on AI Chips To Limit China Access

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  • We heard you liked chips, so we put locater chips on your AI chips so you can sell chips without China getting your chips.

  • Just what we need, the government tracking one more thing. Just like their sweeping disregard of right to privacy ubder the guise of suppressing terror. I get that there is some rationale for this, but I fear the Chinese will find a way to subvert this and the only effect will be felt by law-abiding US citizens,
    • The Chinese are more intelligent than Americans and they'll get their chips if not today, then tomorrow, but themselves. Too bad we couldn't have them as a customer.
      • by HiThere ( 15173 )

        The estimate I've heard is "about 5 years and a tiny bit more". Of course, this depends on exactly which chips you are talking about. IIUC, Holland is still the only source for the best photolithography machines. That may slow them down a bit...unless the US pisses off the EU.

  • In other news... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by r1348 ( 2567295 ) on Friday May 09, 2025 @03:31PM (#65364793)

    ... a U.S. Senator is an idiot.

    • by DDumitru ( 692803 ) <{doug} {at} {easyco.com}> on Friday May 09, 2025 @03:34PM (#65364801) Homepage
      I just moderated you insightful, but then realized it was Tom Cotton, so redundant would have been more appropriate.

      Sorry my moderation will go away because of this comment ;)
    • Is Cotton the one who was Oxford educated and who mysteriously acquired an "aw shucks I'm just a country lawyer" accent after being elected?
      • Nah he's not a fancy lad like that, he humbly attended Harvard, then Claremont (gross) and then Harvard Law.

        That's why it's such a joke to see these folks out there saying college is for losers, they made sure to go and they all make sure their kids go and go to the best schools as well.

    • ... a U.S. Senator is an idiot.

      To be fair, "idiot" and "uninformed" (or "uneducated") are different things. Many of people are uninformed about a lot of things, especially technical stuff, and some are willfully ignorant. Politicians often seem to fall into those categories. Their lack of self-awareness about it is whole other thing...

  • From the article: '"With these enhanced security measures, we can continue to expand access to U.S. technology without compromising our national security," Republican Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas said.'

    Tom Cotton confidently opined that Trump was going to peacefully step down from power if he lost the 2020 election. Upon losing the 2020 election, Trump did not peacefully step down from power.

  • by Arrogant-Bastard ( 141720 ) on Friday May 09, 2025 @03:43PM (#65364825)
    Not that I would ever expect Tom Cotton to actually think through anything, but location tracking requires a method for information about the location of the object to be (a) known to the object and (b) communicated in some fashion to something which is not the object. Is he proposing that (a) be done by GPS? Because I'm sure that all the chip makers would love to re-engineer to accommodate that, and even if they did, it wouldn't be difficult for any competent adversary to set up a fake GPS signal. (Doubly so because it's already been done.) And then there's matter of (b): how are these chips supposed to report their location? Is he proposing embedded radio transmitters? Chip makers will love accommodating that too, especially since it's readily defeated by a Faraday cage. Or is he suggesting that these chips should exfiltrate their location over a network? Because that's not going to work either.

    And even if all these issues were magically solved, China could just set up data centers in other countries. (Let's note that given the ongoing rapid US retreat from numerous countries, a power vacuum is being created and that China is wasting no time moving into it. "We took over your vaccine program when the Americans abandoned you, how about letting us set up a data center?" and similar approaches are going to work.)
    • He's a politician, a Big Ideas man. He leaves the technical trivialities for others to figure out. Plus it doesnt matter if it could never actually work, it looks like hes got his finger on the pulse to other idiots.

    • Also considering the cost of these chips even at every stage of production the packaging and shipments are likely already GPS tracked and have full logistics through their manufacture.

      Once they go to distribution or out of NVIDIA's hands that's where the fuckery can step in.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      From the article.

      "The technology for verifying the location of chips would rely on the chips communicating with a secured computer server that would use the length of time it takes for the signal to reach the server to verify where chips are, a concept that relies on knowing that computer signals move at the speed of light.""

    • Seen too many movies where something the size of a grain of rice is implanted in a person and then will report their location anywhere in the world.

      Text of the bill [senate.gov]: "The term 'chip security mechanism' means a software-, firmware-, or hardware-enabled security mechanism or a physical security mechanism.'" Oh, all righty then. That clears everything right up.

      "Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall require any covered integrated circuit product to be outfitt

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      how are these chips supposed to report their location? Is he proposing embedded radio transmitters? Chip makers will love accommodating that too, especially since it's readily defeated by a Faraday cage.

      It won't even work. The radio transmission won't get far without an external antenna. A chip can't receive GPS signals either, not without an external GPS antenna. The first thing you do when you get your shiny new AI card is you install it in a server chassis - which is generally steel or aluminum and

  • Once the commies crack the cypher then they can use it to track dissidents. Besides A.I chips are merely highly modified GPU chips.
  • by awwshit ( 6214476 ) on Friday May 09, 2025 @04:23PM (#65364907)

    Remote Datacenter, problem solved.

  • In addition about how technically unfeasible this is for various reasons mentioned above: by now we have learned how evolution works. They limited advanced chips and DeepSeek come with advanced methods. They tried to limit Huawei and it is stronger than even. You limit the chips and Chinese will learn how to make good enough replacements. And in 10 years their replacements will be competitive, while if you just let them buy the chips they would remain dependent on your tech.

  • by hambone142 ( 2551854 ) on Friday May 09, 2025 @04:26PM (#65364919)

    Moronic Congress critter just doesn't understand that China can produce A.I. results without A.I. integrated circuits.

  • This has got to be some kind of false flag, right? All of this news coverage of "AI" and how it's the next Messiah and such, when we all know that it's not "AI" and absolute bullshit. Are we trying to convince hostile countries to invest heavily in this crap in hopes it ruins their economy? The tech bros are certainly ruining ours with all this bullshit hype. The implosion is near, take cover people.

  • I mean, you could very inexpensively integrate a GPS chip on there. You could put it into the firmware that the signal has a private key that encrypts said signal. It would likely get hacked eventually but by then probably not be export limited. So from a hardware perspective this isn't impossible.

    So it's not impossible. But it wouldn't work because a Server GPU, inside of a rack at the bottom wouldn't get signal. You could maybe... maybe... build a big enough antenna into every GPU that it would at leas

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      integrate a GPS chip on there. You could put it into the firmware that the signal has a private key that encrypts said signal.

      Digitally signing the GPS signal is impossible, because the chipmakers don't own the satellites that provide the GPS system.

      Also, the PRC would simply plant a covert receiver somewhere and record/surveil all the signals received on a specified frequency over a period of time. Then transmit the recording over a VPN tunnel to their remote site and replay the recorded signals local

  • That's a rather stupid idea the politicians are pushing.

    If the tracking isn't in the chip itself, it can be removed by ditching the packaging.

    If it is in the chip, that makes things even more screwy. First it will need a completely new design of the chip, you can't just slap something like that into pre-existing microcircuitry and expect things to remain the same. It introduces changes to power, EM sources, and heat.
    Then there's the issues if it's a passive item like the RF tags a lot of stores use, that on
    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      IIUC, the plan is that if the chip doesn't receive the appropriate acknowledgement from a remote server it will "refuse to boot". Like many games.

      It's doable, but I can't imagine anyone buying it. (Well, I've got a weak imagination in some directions.) This seems pretty much a guarantee to put the vendor out of the business. Even within the US one probably couldn't rely on getting acknowledgement to proceed. (And it would require not only the chip to be designed, but also the motherboard would need to

  • There goes your AI hentai. Sorry guys.

  • ...today. Tomorrow I'm sure will be a fresh new hell coming from a politician
  • Why did they do this [reuters.com] if they were so concerned about exporting AI chips?

The herd instinct among economists makes sheep look like independent thinkers.

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