The Singaporean courts have postponed proceedings for three individuals accused of smuggling powerful Nvidia-produced Graphic Processing Units, allegedly for use by Chinese Artificial Intelligence company DeepSeek. The suspects—Singapore nationals Woon Guo Jie and Alan Wei Zhaolun, along with Chinese citizen Li Ming—now face their next hearing on August 22. According to prosecutors, additional time is needed to assess complex documentation and await responses from multiple international authorities involved in the probe.
The case arises following a prominent Singapore police operation dismantling what is believed to be a major smuggling ring. The accused reportedly deceived suppliers by misrepresenting the intended destinations of advanced servers and equipment purchased during 2023 and 2024. An investigation was launched after the emergence of DeepSeek, a Chinese firm whose new Artificial Intelligence language model matched leading American counterparts. U.S. suspicions were quickly aroused when Nvidia disclosed a disproportionate volume of sales revenue attributed to Singapore—28%—despite only 1% of products being delivered locally, indicating possible covert re-routing of U.S.-restricted chips into China.
Since U.S. authorities enacted tighter export controls on advanced Artificial Intelligence hardware, illicit GPU shipments to China have intensified. Numerous incidents of organized smuggling have surfaced, including online boasts of large hauls circumventing sanctions. These revelations have prompted lawmakers in the U.S. to demand greater transparency from technology companies and regulatory agencies, even as Nvidia and its leadership continue to deny any breaches of export laws. The international scope and sophistication of these smuggling operations have spurred legislative proposals—like mandatory geo-tracking of high-performance GPUs—to improve end-user monitoring and enforcement as global demand for Artificial Intelligence computing power accelerates. Singapore’s hub status as a Southeast Asian business center complicates the crackdown, because billing addresses often do not reflect the true location of advanced hardware end-users, challenging both regional and international authorities.