Hey, beautiful hustlers—Sherry Sanchez here, and I’ve got the juiciest cocktail party secret in tech right now. It’s about Nvidia’s H20 chip, a little slice of silicon that’s more than a computer part—it’s an economic weapon with a side of cash flow.
Here’s the tea: Nvidia is selling boatloads of these AI chips to China. Not the absolute best ones—oh no. America doesn’t let China near the big boss Blackwell chip. Instead, the H20 is like handing them last season’s Prada. Still gorgeous, still powerful, but with the “limited edition” tag missing.
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Why this is the slickest AI geopolitics power play you’ll hear about this year:
China’s AI tech gets a glow-up with H20 chips—because these babies run large language models, medical AI, and even autonomous driving tech like a dream.
Nvidia keeps 85% of the cash and sends 15% of every chip sale to the U.S. government. That’s right—Uncle Sam gets a cut every time China upgrades its AI servers. Think “global landlord collecting rent.”
The 15% wasn’t an accident—it started at 20% until Nvidia’s CEO Jensen Huang worked some CEO magic. Never underestimate a man in a leather jacket.
By selling these instead of the newest AI chips, America keeps China dependent on U.S. technology—like giving them just enough to play but not enough to win the game without us.
Of course, China’s not stupid. They’re eyeing these chips and whispering about “possible backdoors” like the chips are Trojan horses. Meanwhile, U.S. security folks are debating whether this is a masterclass in control or a dangerous assist to China’s AI ambitions.
Here’s the money breakdown:
For America: Billions in revenue with AI chip export controls reinforcing U.S. tech dominance. The 15% revenue share deal, brokered initially under the Trump administration, is unprecedented—turning what was once a ban into a revenue stream for Uncle Sam.
For Nvidia: The company’s China market, accounting for 13% of its sales, stays intact and profitable—despite the 15% cut—and Nvidia’s stock got a glow-up after deal announcements.
For China: A turbocharged AI bump thanks to the H20 chip sales, but with America firmly holding the leash—so no supercharged Blackwell chips just yet.
So, next time someone says the U.S. is “losing the AI race,” remind them sometimes the smartest players make more money being the dealer than the player.
Want the inside scoop on how Nvidia H20 chip China sales, US-China AI technology deals, and AI chip revenue sharing are shaping the future?
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— Sherry Sanchez for CanaAmeriCANews