Tekmono
  • News
  • Guides
  • Lists
  • Reviews
  • Deals
No Result
View All Result
Tekmono
No Result
View All Result
Home News
Nvidia Denies Backdoor Claims in AI Chips for China

Nvidia Denies Backdoor Claims in AI Chips for China

by Tekmono Editorial Team
11/08/2025
in News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Nvidia Corp. has strongly denied allegations of “backdoors” or hidden controls in its H20 artificial intelligence (AI) chips, following a summons from China’s cyberspace regulator, amid concerns over “tracking and positioning” risks.

David Reber Jr., Nvidia’s Chief Security Officer, addressed the concerns in a blog post, stating, “There are no back doors in Nvidia chips. No kill switches. No spyware. That’s not how trustworthy systems are built — and never will be.” He emphasized that any secret access points to remotely disable hardware or monitor usage would create dangerous vulnerabilities that could be exploited against the creator. Reber further explained, “There is no such thing as a ‘good’ secret backdoor — only dangerous vulnerabilities that need to be eliminated,” adding that hard-coded, single-point controls would be “a gift to hackers and hostile actors.”

Nvidia’s denial comes amid heightened scrutiny from both Beijing and Washington. Following the U.S. government’s partial relaxation of export restrictions on Nvidia’s H20 accelerators to China, China’s Cyberspace Administration initiated an inquiry into potential “backdoors” in the chips. Concurrently, U.S. officials are exploring mechanisms to track the end-use destinations of advanced accelerators more effectively.

Related Reads

Microsoft enhances Copilot with multimodal features, introduces new $99 tier

Apple celebrates 50th anniversary amid scrutiny over privacy practices

Huawei launches Converged Development Engine for HarmonyOS PCs

Salesforce unveils updated Slack with 30 new AI features

In Washington, policy discussions are intensifying, with a proposed ‘Chip Security Act’ under consideration. This legislation aims to embed location verification for export-controlled AI chips and certain high-end consumer GPUs. Representative Bill Huizenga (R-Mich.), a sponsor of the bill, clarified that the measure would not mandate “spyware” or “kill switches,” dismissing claims to the contrary as “disingenuous.”

Enforcement efforts are also rising, as evidenced by the Justice Department’s recent charges against two Chinese nationals accused of smuggling tens of millions of dollars’ worth of restricted GPUs to China through third countries. Nvidia’s stock closed higher by 1.06% on Friday, reaching $182.74.

ShareTweet

You Might Be Interested

Microsoft enhances Copilot with multimodal features, introduces new  tier
News

Microsoft enhances Copilot with multimodal features, introduces new $99 tier

02/04/2026
News

Apple celebrates 50th anniversary amid scrutiny over privacy practices

02/04/2026
News

Huawei launches Converged Development Engine for HarmonyOS PCs

02/04/2026
Salesforce unveils updated Slack with 30 new AI features
News

Salesforce unveils updated Slack with 30 new AI features

02/04/2026
Please login to join discussion

Recent Posts

  • Microsoft enhances Copilot with multimodal features, introduces new $99 tier
  • Apple celebrates 50th anniversary amid scrutiny over privacy practices
  • Huawei launches Converged Development Engine for HarmonyOS PCs
  • Salesforce unveils updated Slack with 30 new AI features
  • Meta announces release of second generation smart glasses starting April 14

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
  • News
  • Guides
  • Lists
  • Reviews
  • Deals
Tekmono is a Linkmedya brand. © 2015.

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Guides
  • Lists
  • Reviews
  • Deals