Silicon With a Side of Surveillance

A tracker for high-end processors could trickle down to the blender on your counter.

Close-up of a glowing blue computer chip mounted on a dark circuit board with intricate pathways and small lights indicating electronic components.

The United States is apparently moving toward a future where semiconductors might be able to report their whereabouts like snitches with a silicon conscience. Michael Kratsios, a senior official and one of the minds behind the federal government’s recently unveiled AI action plan, confirmed Washington is thinking about giving chips “better location-tracking” so they can be followed wherever they go.

The idea is part of a broader strategy to prevent high-powered American chips, made by companies like Nvidia, from finding their way into Chinese hands through smuggling or gray-market sales. In other words, the chips may not just compute, they may tattle.

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