All Content from Business Insider 09月17日
美议员关注华为在英伟达总部十年驻留
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美国国会议员正就华为在美国的研发部门Futurewei长期租用英伟达(Nvidia)总部园区内办公楼一事展开调查。该部门被指控在此期间获得了接触美国先进半导体和人工智能技术的“前所未有的机会”。议员们在一封致Futurewei的信函中表达了担忧,并要求其提供内部文件,以了解其具体活动。自2019年起,华为因国家安全问题已被美国列入黑名单,禁止获取美国芯片和供应商。此次事件引发了对企业间合作及潜在信息泄露的进一步审视,尤其是在当前中美科技竞争日益激烈的背景下。

🔬 **华为美国研发部门长期驻留英伟达总部:** 华为在美国的子公司Futurewei,在英伟达加州总部园区内租用了办公空间长达十年。这种“共地”模式引发了美国议员的担忧,他们认为这可能为华为提供了接触美国尖端半导体和人工智能技术的机会。

📜 **议员要求提供内部文件,展开深入调查:** 美国国会众议院中国共产党特别委员会的议员致函Futurewei,要求其提供内部文件,以了解其在英伟达总部期间的具体活动。议员们引用了2018年的一起诉讼,该诉讼指控华为利用Futurewei进行企业间谍活动。

🔒 **国家安全担忧与科技竞争背景:** 自2019年起,华为因国家安全问题被美国列入黑名单,被禁止获取美国芯片和供应商。此次事件发生在中美科技竞争日益激烈的背景下,议员们对华为在该关键技术领域可能存在的渗透和信息获取表示高度关切。

🏢 **英伟达的回应与Futurewei的搬迁:** 英伟达方面表示,公司确保其办公区域、员工和知识产权的安全,并维持一个独立的、仅限英伟达员工使用的园区。Futurewei已于2024年搬离该园区,但其在硅谷核心地带的持续存在仍引发关注。

Huawei's US research arm spent a decade on Nvidia's headquarters campus in California. US lawmakers want to know what it was doing there.

US lawmakers are asking for information about Huawei's US research arm, which they say shared a campus with Nvidia's Santa Clara, California headquarters.

In a letter sent to Huawei affiliate Futurewei on Sunday, the chairman and a member of the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party said that the Chinese telecommunications giant's US arm was located inside Nvidia's campus for a decade. Futurewei held the prime lease on three buildings at 2330 Central Expressway, while Nvidia subleased space. That setup lasted until 2024, when Nvidia bought out the lease and took full control of the site.

The lawmakers said the arrangement was "deeply concerning" and asked Futurewei to turn over internal documents.

"This co-location provided Futurewei unprecedented access to America's most advanced semiconductor and AI capabilities," wrote Republican Chairman John Moolenaar and Democratic Ranking Member Raja Krishnamoorthi of the House Select Committee on China.

The US has blacklisted Huawei since 2019, cutting it off from advanced chips and restricting American firms from supplying the company due to national security concerns.

The committee referenced a 2018 lawsuit accusing Huawei of using Futurewei as a corporate spy tool. The case was filed in California by Jesse Hong, a former Futurewei employee who accused Huawei of "engagement in enterprise espionage." The lawsuit said Hong was laid off in retaliation for whistleblowing.

According to the lawsuit, Futurewei directed employees to sneak into a closed-door Facebook telecommunications summit using "fake US company names" after Huawei was barred from attending. Futurewei then funneled reports back to executives in China.

The lawsuit also said Futurewei used "consulting work" with US startups to obtain confidential information. Hong's lawsuit was settled in 2019.

"If Futurewei was used to infiltrate closed-door industry meetings and extract sensitive data through both deception and proximity, then its decade-long embedded presence within NVIDIA's campus — at the center of US semiconductor and AI development — cannot be immediately dismissed as incidental," the lawmakers wrote.

Futurewei has since moved to San Jose, "just a ten-minute drive down the road," the letter said. But the company's continued presence in the heart of Silicon Valley "underscores unresolved concerns about how it may still be operating," it added.

Nvidia, Futurewei, Huawei, and the House panel did not respond to a request for comment from Business Insider.

An Nvidia spokesperson told Bloomberg that the company makes sure its "offices, employees, and intellectual property are safe and secure. Even where we have neighbors, we maintain a separate Nvidia-only campus."

The chips war

Huawei has been at the center of Washington's crackdown on Chinese tech for years.

In 2019, the Trump administration blacklisted the telecom giant, cutting it off from US suppliers and banning access to advanced chips made with American technology. Those restrictions did not abate under President Joe Biden. In June 2021, Biden signed an executive order expanding the number of Chinese companies Americans are prohibited from investing in. Huawei was on the list.

But those efforts appear to have only strengthened Huawei's push toward self-sufficiency. The company has been using locally produced chips in its flagship smartphone line, the Huawei Mate, since 2023.

Even Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, has been impressed. In March, Huang said Huawei's "presence in AI is growing every single year," telling the Financial Times that the US government's efforts to stifle the company had been "done poorly."

It's not just Huawei eyeing US chips. Business Insider reported last month that China's military has been trying to source Nvidia hardware for everything from servers running DeepSeek's AI models to 33-pound "robot dogs" with high-definition cameras.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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华为 英伟达 美国国会 科技竞争 国家安全 半导体 人工智能 企业间谍 Huawei Nvidia US Congress Tech Competition National Security Semiconductor Artificial Intelligence Corporate Espionage
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