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The US DOJ indictment against Supermicro (SMCI) reveals the extreme, hands-on measures taken to circumvent export controls. The billionaire founder was caught on camera personally using a hairdryer to swap serial number stickers from real servers to dummy units, highlighting the immense demand and profitability of smuggling AI chips to China.

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Reports of China building a working EUV lithography machine are misleading. The effort appears to be an assembly of smuggled components from ASML's existing supply chain, not a story of domestic innovation. This frames the primary challenge as one of export control evasion rather than a rapid technological leap by China.

The most significant sanctions loophole isn't physical chip smuggling but 'compute smuggling.' Chinese firms establish shell companies to build and operate data centers in neutral countries like Malaysia. They then access this cutting-edge compute power remotely, completely bypassing physical import restrictions on advanced hardware.

The US government revived the name "Operation Gatekeeper," once used for a 90s border project, for a new mission: cracking down on illegal AI chip smuggling to China. This demonstrates how semiconductors have become a national security priority on par with physical border control.

When NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang praises Donald Trump's 'pro-energy' stance, the subtext is a strategic appeal. He is lobbying for the freedom to sell high-performance GPUs to China, despite significant national security implications recognized by the Defense Department.

The "Operation Gatekeeper" bust uncovered a massive illegal AI chip smuggling operation into China. This indicates that prior to the recent policy change, a significant black market existed to circumvent US export controls, suggesting high, unmet demand that official numbers don't capture.

While NVIDIA projects $20 billion in annual sales to China, the recent bust of a $160 million smuggling ring suggests a vast black market already existed. This new legal channel may not represent entirely new demand but rather the formalization of pre-existing, illicit supply chains.

Contrary to their intent, U.S. export controls on AI chips have backfired. Instead of crippling China's AI development, the restrictions provided the necessary incentive for China to aggressively invest in and accelerate its own semiconductor industry, potentially eroding the U.S.'s long-term competitive advantage.

China's superior ability to rapidly build energy infrastructure and data centers means it could have outpaced US firms in building massive AI training facilities. Export controls are the primary reason Chinese hyperscalers haven't matched the massive capital spending of their US counterparts.

Despite Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang's claim of being "100% out of China," the company is experiencing massive, unexplained business growth in neighboring Singapore and Malaysia. This suggests these countries may be acting as intermediary hubs to quietly funnel chips into the Chinese market, bypassing direct restrictions.

TikTok's parent company, ByteDance, is circumventing U.S. export controls on advanced AI chips. It plans to access thousands of NVIDIA's powerful B200 Blackwell chips by partnering with a cloud provider in Southeast Asia, enabling AI development outside of mainland China.