On 31 July 2025 China´s Cyberspace Administration opened a formal inquiry into the H20 chip, summoning Nvidia for technical documentation after flagging a potential ´backdoor´ that could put user data at risk. The probe followed a US proposal earlier in the year that suggested exported chips include ´location-tracking functions´, a measure that Beijing sees as evidence that chip exports could be used to monitor Chinese research and military uses.
The H20 was built by Nvidia to comply with US export controls first imposed in 2022 and tightened in 2023, but the device has been at the centre of a rollercoaster of trade measures. An April 2025 US ban halted sales and left Nvidia with unsold inventory and lost contracts. The ban was reversed in July 2025 after negotiations linked to rare mineral access, and Washington subsequently issued licences that allowed Nvidia to place a large 300,000-unit order with TSMC to meet Chinese demand. Weeks after the reversal, Beijing´s regulator launched its examination, underscoring how quickly commercial access can become a security flashpoint.
China´s actions are both practical and symbolic. Analysts point out that domestic chips such as Huawei´s Ascend 910D cannot yet match the H20 on performance, which helps explain the large H20 orders from Chinese firms and research institutions. At the same time, Beijing has used past measures against foreign suppliers, including a 2023 ban on Micron for critical infrastructure and scrutiny of Intel in 2024, to signal a push for technological autonomy under programmes like Made in China 2025.
The wider economic and geopolitical stakes are high. Export restrictions and regulatory scrutiny disrupt supply chains, bolster foundries like TSMC, and create openings for local suppliers even as they slow some research projects. The dispute also feeds ´shadow technology´ dynamics, where parallel ecosystems develop and interoperability erodes; examples include reported delays by Chinese firms unable to train large models on local chips.
Third-party actors matter. Taiwan, South Korea and the European Union have production and policy levers that could either mitigate or magnify fragmentation. The article argues that multilateral dialogue, transparent security standards and fair trade mechanisms are needed to prevent long-term fragmentation of the semiconductor ecosystem, and to keep advanced chips from becoming persistent instruments of geopolitical leverage.