Newsletter IconFacebook IconX IconThreads IconInstagram IconYouTube IconPinterest Icon
Giveaway: Win an NZXT H6 RGB+ Case, Kraken Elite AIO, RGB Fans and 1200W PSU

NVIDIA cuts over half of Asian buyers from AI chip whitelist in China crackdown

NVIDIA has slashed its authorized AI chip customers across Singapore, Malaysia, and Japan by more than half to stop products being diverted to China.

NVIDIA cuts over half of Asian buyers from AI chip whitelist in China crackdown
Comments
Tech and Science Editor
Published
1 minute & 45 seconds read time
TL;DR: NVIDIA drastically reduced authorized AI chip customers in Singapore, Malaysia, and Japan by over half, introducing a vetted whitelist and stricter compliance checks to prevent high-end accelerators being diverted to China; excluded firms can reapply, and many affected were neo-cloud AI providers amid concerns over a large GPU black market.
Voice: Jak Connor
0:00 / 2:12
Use left and right arrow keys to seek audio.

NVIDIA has cut its authorized AI chip customers in Singapore, Malaysia, and Japan by more than half in an effort to reduce the number of unauthorized products from being funneled through to China.

NVIDIA cuts over half of Asian buyers from AI chip whitelist in China crackdown 2

According to a new report from the Financial Times, the chipmaker has implemented a new "white list" of vetted companies, which have passed stricter compliance checks ensuring NVIDIA's high-end AI accelerators don't end up in places they aren't legally allowed to be. The move signals a major tightening of access to its AI hardware in key Asian markets, which comes on the heels of intense investigations from reporters that unveiled an expansive black market in China for NVIDIA GPUs.

NVIDIA's tightening of its grip on the Asian market follows increasing pressure from regulators and policymakers to enforce export controls on AI GPUs for fear the US will be selling what it needs to competitors that will enable it to gain a leg up in the AI race. NVIDIA's new restrictions notably excluded more than half of NVIDIA's previous customers, and companies that failed the initial compliance check are eligible to reapply. According to FT, many of the companies that were affected by NVIDIA's changes are neo-cloud providers, specialized cloud platforms for AI workloads.

NVIDIA cuts over half of Asian buyers from AI chip whitelist in China crackdown 1

Frequently Asked Questions

TweakBot answers common questions about this news using TweakTown's own coverage from this page and related content from our archive. Tap a question to reveal the answer, or type your own below.

Question #1

Which countries in Asia did NVIDIA cut authorized AI chip customers in, according to the article?

Question #2

Which types of companies were notably excluded from NVIDIA’s revised whitelist?

Question #3

Can companies that failed NVIDIA’s initial compliance check reapply for authorization?

Question #4

How did the Financial Times characterize the scale of the NVIDIA GPU black market referenced in the article?

Have a question not listed here? Ask below and TweakBot will answer it.

Previous reports indicated the NVIDIA AI GPU black market smuggling ring is more than a billion-dollar industry, with a report from FT in July 2025 claiming, after an investigation, that more than $1 billion worth of NVIDIA AI GPUs were smuggled into China over a three-month period. While regulations have certainly tightened more since then, one does wonder if the value of that black market has increased or decreased since July 2025. My guess would be a sharp increase with seemingly no end in sight.

Photo of the Hewlett Packard Enterprise DL380 G10 Server 1024GB

Best Deals: Hewlett Packard Enterprise DL380 G10 Server 1024GB

Prices last scanned 2 hours and 55 minutes ago

* Prices may be inaccurate. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. We earn affiliate commission from any Newegg or PCCG sales.

News Source:ft.com

Comments

Tech and Science Editor

Email IconX IconLinkedIn Icon

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.

Stay Updated

Follow TweakTown for breaking tech news, reviews, and daily updates.

Add TweakTown as a preferred source on GoogleFind TweakTown on Apple News
Newsletter Subscription