Nvidia rolled out new software that can pinpoint where its AI chips are operating around the world. The opt-in service arrives as Washington increases pressure on the chipmaker to prevent its technology from reaching restricted countries.
NVIDIA Corporation, NVDA
The software uses a client agent that customers install to monitor GPU health. It collects telemetry data including IP addresses and timestamps. Nvidia said customers can view their chip locations through a dashboard that shows global deployment or specific compute zones.
Senator Tom Cotton led a bipartisan group in May to introduce the Chip Security Act. The proposed law would require security mechanisms and location verification in advanced AI chips. This follows Justice Department investigations into smuggling operations that moved more than $160 million worth of Nvidia chips to China.
Current export rules block Nvidia from selling advanced AI chips to Chinese companies without special licenses. President Trump recently indicated plans to ease some restrictions. However, rules on cutting-edge chips will stay in place.
Chinese officials warned Nvidia against adding backdoors or vulnerabilities to its chips. After a national security investigation, Beijing prevented local tech companies from buying Nvidia products. China hasn’t decided whether to allow imports of Nvidia’s H200 chips despite U.S. approval.
Nvidia stock fell 1.3% in after-hours trading Wednesday following Oracle’s disappointing earnings report. Oracle guided for weaker earnings next quarter and announced $50 billion in capital spending for fiscal 2026, up from earlier estimates of $35 billion.
Oracle’s remaining performance obligation came in at $523 billion. This fell slightly below what analysts expected. The cloud company has major contracts with Nvidia for data center chips.
The weak guidance raised questions about Oracle’s ability to convert spending into revenue. Oracle has sold billions in bonds recently to fund AI infrastructure. The cost of protecting Oracle’s debt against default hit its highest level since March 2009 last week.
CoreWeave dropped over 3% after hours. The AI cloud firm also buys chips from Nvidia and has deals with OpenAI. Other chip companies including Broadcom, Marvell Technology, and AMD fell between 0.5% and 1%.
Oracle signed contracts to supply computing power to major AI players including OpenAI. Competition from Google and other tech giants has increased skepticism about OpenAI’s growth prospects. This has weighed on Oracle stock in recent weeks.
Nvidia’s new tracking capabilities could help enforce export controls. The system provides visibility into where chips operate without giving the company remote control powers. Location data comes from network information and system signals that map to physical or cloud locations.
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