@SenTomCotton: One of the foreign companies smuggling US chips is OBON, which stands for One Belt, One Network. Call me crazy, but may…
Summary
Senator Tom Cotton alleges that a company named OBON, referencing China's Belt and Road Initiative, is smuggling US chips, and criticizes Super Micro for selling advanced technologies to them.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 05/17/26, 10:25 PM
One of the foreign companies smuggling US chips is OBON, which stands for One Belt, One Network.
Call me crazy, but maybe American companies shouldn’t sell advanced technologies to companies literally named after one of Xi Jinping’s signature policies.
Super Micro should account for how this could’ve happened.
Similar Articles
Taiwan Raids Super Micro Office in Nvidia Chip Smuggling Probe
Taiwanese prosecutors raided Super Micro's office as part of an investigation into AI chip smuggling to China, involving forged documents and dummy servers valued at $2.5 billion, marking a significant escalation in export enforcement that impacts supply chain due diligence.
@nicksortor: JUST IN: President Trump recommends chip manufacturers IMMEDIATELY move their manufacturing facilities to AMERICA, as c…
President Trump recommends that chip manufacturers move their facilities to America, citing China's desire to take over Taiwan and the importance of chips for AI and technological advances. He claims the US could achieve 40-50% of world chip business by the end of his term.
Seems this community might have missed it: Bill that would mandate AI chip location tracking gains industry support | Half a dozen companies have come out in support of the Chip Security Act, which would require location-tracking mechanisms for America’s most advanced computing chips.
The Chip Security Act, which would mandate location-tracking mechanisms for advanced AI chips to prevent diversion to China, has gained support from six companies specializing in tracking sensitive shipments, while opponents argue it could hamper U.S. chip sales.
@Miles_Brundage: “Chinese companies’ overseas subsidiaries (e.g., Tencent Malaysia) have been able to legally buy Nvidia Blackwell chips…
BIS issued guidance requiring licenses for advanced AI chip exports to Chinese-headquartered firms located outside China, highlighting previous enforcement gaps for overseas subsidiaries like Tencent Malaysia buying Nvidia Blackwell chips.
Apple wants permission to buy memory from a blacklisted Chinese supplier
Apple is seeking permission from the Trump administration to buy RAM chips from CXMT, a Chinese supplier blacklisted over ties to the People's Liberation Army, to alleviate rising memory costs that have driven Apple to raise product prices.