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Jenson Huang, CEO of NVIDIA, believes that Chinese EI researchers are “world -class”.
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US -based AI companies such as Anthropic and Openai hire them, he said in an interview with Stratechi.
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International competition is healthy – but only if regulations do not prevent the US from dealing with, he said.
Jenson Huang, CEO of NVIDIA, believes that AI researchers in China are some of the best in the world – so it’s no surprise that US companies are introducing them aboard them.
“Researchers, AI scientists in China, they are world -class. These are not Chinese AI researchers, they are world -class II researchers,” Huang said in an interview with Ben Thompson, author of Stratechi. “You walk up and down the paths of anthrop or Openai or Deepmind. There are a whole bunch of AI researchers there.
Overall, the country makes “fantastic” in the AI market, Huang said with models from Chinese companies-Deepseek and Manus-Sea are outlined as powerful challenges of systems designed in the United States.
“Let’s admit it, Deepseek is a deeply excellent job,” Huang said. “To give them something that is a bit of it is so deeply confident that I just can’t even endure it.”
The challenges presented by international rivals, Huang added are absolutely essential for the continuous improvement of AI companies in the United States.
“Everyone loves competition. Companies need competition to inspire, nations need this and there is no doubt that we are encouraging them,” he said. “However, I fully expected China to be there at every step. Huawei is a great company. They are a world -class technology company.”
Intensive competition can become a problem, Huang said, if US -based companies do not have all the tools needed. The construction of the “ecosystem” needed to support AI, he said, it is already difficult – and Huang believes that operations can be crithed through restrictive provisions. He was particularly critical of the “Diffusion Rule”, a policy of the Biden era, which would establish restrictions on the export of AI chips manufactured by the United States, comes on May 15th.
“You can’t just say,” Let’s write a rule for diffusion, protect one layer at the expense of everything else. “It’s pointless,” he said. “The idea that we will limit American AI technology just at the time when international competitors have caught up with it, and we almost predicted it.”