Tech & Business Policy
Supermicro Co-Founder Pleads Not Guilty to Smuggling Billions in Nvidia Servers to Restricted Parties
Image: Primary Super Micro Computer co-founder Yih-Shyan "Wally" Liaw entered a not guilty plea Wednesday in Manhattan federal court on charges related to smuggling billions of dollars worth of Nvidia servers to restricted destinations, Tom's Hardware reported.
Liaw is one of several defendants charged in a case that US prosecutors say involved illegally exporting high-performance computing equipment in violation of export control laws. The charges center on allegations that servers containing Nvidia chips were routed to parties subject to US trade restrictions.
The case is one of the highest-profile enforcement actions yet stemming from the US government's aggressive posture on AI chip export controls. Nvidia's high-end GPU products are subject to strict licensing requirements for export to China and several other countries, reflecting Washington's stated concern about advanced computing hardware being used to develop military AI applications or other capabilities that could threaten US national security interests.
Supermicro, one of the world's largest server manufacturers, has faced separate regulatory scrutiny in recent years including an accounting investigation. Liaw's plea marks the beginning of what is expected to be a contested legal proceeding.
Export control enforcement around AI hardware has intensified significantly since 2022. The Department of Commerce and Department of Justice have both ramped up investigations into alleged circumvention schemes involving Nvidia chips, with several cases now working through federal courts. Legal observers say the Supermicro case could set precedents for how export control violations in the AI hardware supply chain are prosecuted.
Sources
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This story was sourced from Tom's Hardware and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.