The most advanced AI chips on Earth are supposed to stay out of China. Some are getting there anyway, and Taiwan wants to slam that door shut.
Taiwan makes most of the world's top chips, so what it does next matters far beyond the island.
The Loophole Taiwan Wants To Close
Right now, Taiwan does not treat sending AI chips to China without approval as a crime. So its officials can only warn sellers that they may be breaking US rules.
The only way to take a seller to court is under other local laws. That is the gap Taiwan wants to fix with much stricter export controls.
The plan being weighed would give the courts real power, with jail time on the table. The goal is to stop top chips from leaking out the side door.
This is a real risk because the chips are small and worth a lot. A few servers can carry millions of dollars of chips, so they are easy to move and hard to track.
Why does this matter for buyers? Chips are the fuel of the AI boom, and Taiwan holds the tank. A tighter grip there means fewer top chips slip to China.
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Why The US Cares So Much
The US first put up these walls in 2022, since it was worried that China could use Nvidia chips to build a stronger army. The rules have grown tighter most years since then.
Under those US rules, selling top AI chips to China is banned unless Washington says yes. The hard part is stopping the chips once they leave the plant, since smugglers can reroute AI servers on the way to China.
China wants the best chips to keep pace in the AI race, while the US wants to slow that down. That tug of war is what Taiwan is now caught in.
Taiwan has warned sellers before, but a warning is not a charge. Few of these cases ever reach a court, which is just what the new plan would change.
The Market Already Flinched
TSMC is the world's most important chip maker, since it builds the chips that power most of the world's AI. Its stock slipped after the report came out, a sign of how tightly the AI trade is tied to this one island.
There is a cost with Beijing too. Tighter rules could draw a sharp reply from China, which has hit back at past chip limits with steps of its own.
Worth Noting
The plan is still early, and Reuters has not confirmed every part of the report. Lawmakers would still have to write the new rule and pass it.
Either way, the threat alone sends a message. Sellers now know the rules could grow real teeth.
Nothing is final yet, and even the idea was enough to move the most important chip stock in the world.
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