达里奥·阿莫代伊(Dario Amodei) recently publicly stated that if the US allows NVIDIA to export H200 artificial intelligence acceleration chips to China, it's "a bit crazy" and "too reckless". He said this again pushed his company's differences with "the Yeezy camp" (presumably NVIDIA and AMD) into the spotlight.
The US government has officially confirmed that 25% tariffs will be imposed on exports of NVIDIA H200 and AMD MI325X chips to China, providing a new revenue source for the US government. However, Amodei believes that tariffs won't eliminate security risks, as he said in an interview with Bloomberg TV: "Although H200 is not our latest generation product, it's still more powerful than what China can currently get, so exporting this product to China is a huge mistake".
Amodei used extreme analogies to emphasize the risk: "I think it's crazy, I think it's like selling nuclear weapons to North Korea and boasting about it - Boeing has already proven that for us". Although the concerns may be short-term, reports say Chinese customs officials have blocked H200 chips from entering the country and warned domestic enterprises not to purchase them under any circumstances.
The differences between Anthropic and NVIDIA (and AMD) go back a year. In May 2025, Anthropic publicly stated that they supported the "AI spread" policy and advocated for setting lower barriers for exporting chips to "second-tier countries", increasing monitoring, and increasing law enforcement budget to reduce smuggling risks. They cited examples such as a Hong Kong customs case where two people were arrested trying to smuggle 70 high-end graphics cards along with 617 pounds of shrimp into the country, or a woman who was found carrying 202 Intel CPUs bound to her body and dressed up like a "pregnant belly" trying to enter China.
NVIDIA responded strongly, saying that American companies should focus on innovation and embracing challenges rather than creating stories about heavy and precise electronic devices being smuggled in "belly bags" or "with live lobsters". NVIDIA CEO Dr. Jensen Huang also criticized Amodei's previous statement that AI would eliminate half of primary jobs within five years, calling it "dangerous" and saying only his own company could safely develop it; meanwhile, he implied that other companies should not get involved and was trying to sell the idea that AI is too expensive for everyone.
In a more recent public speech, Dr. Huang also criticized social attitudes towards AI as being consistently negative, which many interpreted as a veiled attack on Amodei. He said no company should advocate for more government regulation of AI because their motivations are inherently conflicting and do not align with the overall interests of society, but rather serve the interests of individual companies.
The US government has officially confirmed that 25% tariffs will be imposed on exports of NVIDIA H200 and AMD MI325X chips to China, providing a new revenue source for the US government. However, Amodei believes that tariffs won't eliminate security risks, as he said in an interview with Bloomberg TV: "Although H200 is not our latest generation product, it's still more powerful than what China can currently get, so exporting this product to China is a huge mistake".
Amodei used extreme analogies to emphasize the risk: "I think it's crazy, I think it's like selling nuclear weapons to North Korea and boasting about it - Boeing has already proven that for us". Although the concerns may be short-term, reports say Chinese customs officials have blocked H200 chips from entering the country and warned domestic enterprises not to purchase them under any circumstances.
The differences between Anthropic and NVIDIA (and AMD) go back a year. In May 2025, Anthropic publicly stated that they supported the "AI spread" policy and advocated for setting lower barriers for exporting chips to "second-tier countries", increasing monitoring, and increasing law enforcement budget to reduce smuggling risks. They cited examples such as a Hong Kong customs case where two people were arrested trying to smuggle 70 high-end graphics cards along with 617 pounds of shrimp into the country, or a woman who was found carrying 202 Intel CPUs bound to her body and dressed up like a "pregnant belly" trying to enter China.
NVIDIA responded strongly, saying that American companies should focus on innovation and embracing challenges rather than creating stories about heavy and precise electronic devices being smuggled in "belly bags" or "with live lobsters". NVIDIA CEO Dr. Jensen Huang also criticized Amodei's previous statement that AI would eliminate half of primary jobs within five years, calling it "dangerous" and saying only his own company could safely develop it; meanwhile, he implied that other companies should not get involved and was trying to sell the idea that AI is too expensive for everyone.
In a more recent public speech, Dr. Huang also criticized social attitudes towards AI as being consistently negative, which many interpreted as a veiled attack on Amodei. He said no company should advocate for more government regulation of AI because their motivations are inherently conflicting and do not align with the overall interests of society, but rather serve the interests of individual companies.