Huang Got the H200 License and Chinese Firms Did Not Buy
Washington cleared H200 sales to ten Chinese firms and Beijing pushed buyers to Huawei — the cleared chips are not moving.
The news. The narrative. The timeline.
Washington cleared H200 sales to ten Chinese firms and Beijing pushed buyers to Huawei — the cleared chips are not moving.
Two competing labs ran identical security coalitions with the same three anchor partners — the news is the mirror, not the launch.
The plaintiff in a $150 billion AI-governance trial chose statecraft over the courtroom, and his lead counsel apologized to the jury.
Two AI-security initiatives now pitch themselves against a breach neither vendor has said its customers paid for.
A Fox News source bolted a Chinese-hardware national-security frame onto Waymo's 3,791-vehicle flood recall, with no document and no second source.
Day 39 carries the count forward with no Anthropic deliverable, while OpenAI's mirror Daybreak signs the same Cisco, CrowdStrike and Palo Alto partners.
The H200 license cleared and Chinese firms did not buy because Beijing's domestic-chip preference is now a stated policy posture.
The court is moving to verdict watch while the named plaintiff is on a foreign tarmac, and his lawyer is the one apologizing for it.
Two AI security launches share a partner list and a marketing claim; neither will name the breach victim their products are supposed to prevent.