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Headline Roundup August 12th, 2025

US To Receive 15% Cut of AMD and Nvidia AI Chip Sales to China

Summary from the AllSides News Team

President Trump approved exports of some artificial intelligence (AI) chips to China via a nonconventional revenue-share deal between the US government and Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD).

The Details: Nvidia and AMD have agreed to give the US government 15% of revenue generated from chip sales to China, effectively making the federal government a partner in their Chinese operations. Critics have warned that the arrangement could enable China to gain greater access to advanced US computing power, even as the two nations compete for technological dominance. Rached last week, the deal could bring in over $2 billion for the US government.

For Context: Trump said that America’s most advanced chips are still off-limits to China, calling Nvidia’s latest Blackwell processor “super, super advanced” technology that no one else has, and won’t for at least five years. He also repeatedly characterized Nvidia’s H20 chips, which are sold to China, as essentially obsolete.

How The Media Covered It: News outlets across the political spectrum acknowledged the national security concerns raised over providing China with AI chips, and the rarity of a financial agreement between companies and the government. The New York Times (Lean Left bias) highlighted the whiplash from the Trump administration, which had banned AI chip sales to China in April, and described Nvidia’s chips as “ideal for running some of the calculations that power AI” with performance surpassing that of Chinese rival Huawei. Reuters (Center) quoted former director of Technology and National Security at the White House National Security Council Saif Khan saying that “even with scaled-down versions of flagship Nvidia (chips), China could spend and buy enough of them to build world-leading, frontier-scale AI supercomputers.” The New York Post (Lean Right) highlighted Trump’s defense of the decision, writing that he “painted himself as a tough negotiator who extracted payment for access to the Chinese market while protecting America’s technological edge.” 

Written by the AllSides staff (of humans). Learn more. Support our mission. Suggest an improvement to this summary.

Featured Coverage of this Story

From the Right
Trump defends taking 15% cut of Nvidia, AMD chip sales to China
News

President Donald Trump defended his controversial deal requiring Nvidia and AMD to fork over 15% of their China sales revenue to the US government to skirt export controls — insisting the computer chips involved are outdated technology.

“No, this is an old chip that China already has,” Trump said Monday, referring to Nvidia’s H20 processor, adding that “China already has it in a different form, different name, but they have it.”

The president emphasized that America’s most advanced chips remain off-limits to China, describing Nvidia’s newest Blackwell processor as “super, super advanced” technology...

Open on New York Post (News)
From the Center
Trump opens door to sales of version of Nvidia's next-gen AI chips in China
News

U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday suggested he might allow Nvidia (NVDA.O), opens new tab to sell a scaled-down version of its next-generation advanced GPU chip in China, despite deep-seated fears in Washington that China could harness U.S. artificial intelligence capabilities to supercharge its military.

The move could open the door to China securing more advanced computing power from the U.S. even as the two countries battled for technology supremacy, critics said.

Open on Reuters
From the Left
U.S. Government to Take Cut of Nvidia and AMD A.I. Chip Sales to China
U.S. Government to Take Cut of Nvidia and AMD A.I. Chip Sales to China

Holston/The New York Times

News

Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices are expected to pay the United States 15 percent of the money they take in from selling artificial intelligence chips to China, as part of a highly unusual financial agreement with the Trump administration.

The deal, which was described by three people familiar with the agreement who spoke anonymously because they didn’t have permission to discuss it publicly, comes a month after Nvidia received permission to sell a version of its artificial intelligence chips to China.

While the Trump administration publicly said a month ago...

Open on New York Times (News)
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