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TikTok owner ByteDance to join AI chip race with its custom in-house CPUs

ByteDance is developing its own CPUs to support growing AI infrastructure needs amid chip shortages and rising costs, per sources.

TikTok owner ByteDance to join AI chip race with its custom in-house CPUs
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TL;DR: ByteDance is designing custom CPUs for AI inference to reduce reliance on third-party hardware amid rising chip costs and shortages. Partnering with Samsung and TSMC, it plans production by 2026, aiming to control AI performance and scalability while joining tech firms developing in-house AI accelerators.
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ByteDance is developing its own CPUs to address growing AI infrastructure demands amid rising chip prices and supply shortages. Essentially, ByteDance, the owner of TikTok, has seen how much money hardware companies are making and now wants a slice of the AI pie, and/or it doesn't want to keep relying on third parties to provide it with the necessary hardware.

TikTok owner ByteDance to join AI chip race with its custom in-house CPUs 2

The company, best known for TikTok, is reportedly designing custom silicon to power expanding AI operations. Sources from Reuters state the chips will be used for AI inference tasks, with production potentially starting this year. The company is said to be in talks with Samsung and TSMC for manufacturing, with at least 100,000 units expected in 2026.

If accurate, the move signals a major pivot into hardware, positioning ByteDance alongside other tech firms like Google and Meta, which have also begun developing in-house AI accelerators intended to assist the demand for as many AI-capable chips as possible.

The decision is driven by tightening global chip supply and rising third-party silicon costs. AI is gobbling up hardware at such a rate that component manufacturers are switching or even abandoning entire markets to pursue the seemingly endless supply of money from AI companies. Component manufacturers selling large quantities to AI companies have choked supply, driving consumer prices through the roof, particularly for RAM and SSDs.

With its chip R&D team now over 1,000 employees, ByteDance is doubling down on AI hardware. The firm aims to reduce dependency on external suppliers and gain more control over its AI performance and scalability, which is undoubtedly part of China's overarching plan to reduce reliance on US-supplied hardware - basically NVIDIA.

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News Source:reuters.com

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Jak joined TweakTown in 2017 and has since reviewed 100s of new tech products and kept us informed daily on the latest science, space, and artificial intelligence news. Jak's love for science, space, and technology, and, more specifically, PC gaming, began at 10 years old. It was the day his dad showed him how to play Age of Empires on an old Compaq PC. Ever since that day, Jak fell in love with games and the progression of the technology industry in all its forms.

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