Recently, NVIDIA shared an article by Aaron Ginn, co-founder of AI company Hydra Host, on social media platforms, pointing out that although the United States has implemented export controls on H20 chips, China's AI field has still made significant progress.NVIDIA said that these bans not only failed to slow down China's development, but also weakened the United States' leadership in the economic and technological fields.

NVIDIA emphasized that in order to win the AI ​​​​race, the United States’ full-stack platform must maintain a global standard status, and attached Ginn’s comment article.

Ginn pointed out in his comments that the United States banned the export of H20 chips from April to July this year, but China still made progress in AI technology.

While NVIDIA's high-end chips are critical to delivering the performance needed to run AI, Ginn believes the company's CUDA platform—including its programming model and AI toolkit—is more important and cannot be easily copied.

Ginn also criticized the former president's AI proliferation rules, arguing that they lumped together developed countries like Portugal and Switzerland with restive countries like Yemen and Ukraine.

This view is consistent with Huang's views on export controls as a failing strategy and that the United States should move beyond preventing competitors from accessing its technology to stay ahead of the AI ​​race.