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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Edwin Chan

US to curb China access to cloud services like Amazon, WSJ says

WASHINGTON — The U.S. is preparing to curtail Chinese companies’ access to cloud-computing services including those provided by Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp., The Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the situation.

Washington is considering requiring cloud providers to seek government permission before serving Chinese companies that employ such platforms to train AI models, the Journal reported.

Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services are the global leaders in the business of providing internet computing to enterprises, and compete in China with the likes of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. through local, state-affiliated datacenter partners.

The White House didn’t respond to a request for comment. The Commerce Department declined to comment while the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative deferred to Commerce.

The Biden administration plans to tighten export controls announced in October to restrict sales of some artificial-intelligence chips to China, seeking to contain its rival’s development of a technology considered key to the country’s geopolitical and economic future. Part of the measures under discussion included restricting cloud access for Chinese AI developers, which was first reported by the Journal last week.

Under the broader Commerce Department proposal, expected in July, the U.S. would revise export controls to make it harder to sell some chips to China without a license. The move is aimed in part at Nvidia Corp.’s A800 chip, which the U.S.-based company designed after the earlier controls were announced. The product’s configuration comes just within those limits.

The U.S. and China are escalating their technological conflict. On Monday, Beijing slapped controls on the export of metals critical to the chip, electric-vehicle and defense industries, showing it has some power to retaliate against moves by the U.S., Japan and Europe to cut Beijing off from advanced technology.

(Akayla Gardner contributed to this report.)

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