Nvidia denies 'tall tales' that chips are being smuggled in fake baby bumps and alongside live lobsters

Nvidia headquarters
(Image credit: Nvidia)

Nvidia and AI firm Anthropic are currently embroiled in a back-and-forth around claims the former's chips are being smuggled into China, and the concerns that smuggling raises. Where Anthropic cites a systemic problem, Nvidia argues Anthropic is telling "tall tales".

In a Diffusion Rule' needs adjusting to allow tier 2 countries better access to technology, alongside more lenient rules for tier 2 countries.

Effectively, the AI Diffusion Rule, which takes effect on May 15, would prioritise allies of America for the control of advanced AI chips, and any chips being smuggled into China would subvert the aims of that rule.

For some context on those specific methods for smuggling, a woman was caught after alongside live lobsters. These aren't just random claims on behalf of Anthropic, it's citing previous cases of smuggling.

Nvidia, however, told CNBC, "American firms should focus on innovation and rise to the challenge, rather than tell tall tales that large, heavy, and sensitive electronics are somehow smuggled in ‘baby bumps’ or ‘alongside live lobsters".

Nvidia H100 chips inside a server room at the Yotta Data Services Pvt. data center, in Navi Mumbai, India

(Image credit: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Given the antagonism between America and China regarding advancement in AI (as shown by the likes of DeepSeek), Anthropic, as an American AI company, has an investment in America being the dominant leader in AI growth. As cited at the bottom of Anthropic's blog post, Anthropic's leaders have previously argued America's "shared security, prosperity and freedoms hang in the balance", in regards to wider AI and adoption.

On the way to a recent White House event Jen-Hsun Huang has spoken about the need to "accelerate the diffusion of American AI technology around the world." That's Nvidia's CEO arguing for getting more 'American' AI chips out into different territories, which could kinda be on the same side of the argument as Anthropic. Especially as he also later stated that: "China is right behind us," which is also seemingly leaning into that whole secure nationhood stuff, too.

This is one step in a large argument made by companies concerning their competition with China. Just a few months ago, OpenAI argued it should be allowed to scrape copyrighted content as it would lose out to China otherwise.

Anthropic, like many other major AI companies, is reliant on the hardware of Nvidia to operate in wider AI workloads. The examples it brings up are from chip smugglers in the last few years, but it doesn't argue that these specific examples are how smugglers are beating detection right now. In this sense, Anthropic is broadly gesturing at a perceived problem with smuggling to justify tightening restrictions and enforcement in light of the Diffusion Rule.

Nvidia is hand-waving that concern with its response, but the incredulity in the messaging does seem a tad strange, given these were previously successful smuggling techniques, albeit not specifically of Nvidia products. Anthropic has not given any evidence of any relevant or ongoing smuggling techniques as of the time of writing.

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James Bentley
Hardware writer

James is a more recent PC gaming convert, often iring graphics cards, cases, and motherboards from afar. It was not until 2019, after just finishing a degree in law and media, that they decided to throw out the last few years of education, build their PC, and start writing about gaming instead. In that time, he has covered the latest doodads, contraptions, and gismos, and loved every second of it. Hey, it’s better than writing case briefs.

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