US mulls new rules for AI chip exports, including requiring investments by foreign firms in US


Semiconductor chips are seen on a circuit board of a computer in this illustration picture taken February 25, 2022. REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration

SAN FRANCISCO, ⁠March 5 (Reuters) - U.S. officials are ⁠debating a new regulatory framework ‌for exporting artificial intelligence chips and are considering requiring foreign nations to ​invest in U.S. AI ⁠data centers or ⁠security guaranteesas a condition for granting ⁠exports ‌of large numbers of chips, according to ⁠a document seen by Reuters.

The rules, ​which ‌are not yet final and ⁠could change, ​would be the first attempt to regulate the flow of ⁠AI chips to U.S. ​allies and partners since President Donald Trump's administrationrescinded its predecessor's so-called ⁠AI diffusion rules, which sought to keep a significant amount of AI infrastructure buildout in the ​U.S. and route ⁠most purchases through a handful ​of U.S. cloud ‌computing companies.

(Reporting by Alexandra ​Alper in Washington and Stephen Nellis in San Francisco)

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