Tech Explained: US Commerce Department withdraws planned rule on AI chip exports  in Simple Terms

Tech Explained: Here’s a simplified explanation of the latest technology update around Tech Explained: US Commerce Department withdraws planned rule on AI chip exports in Simple Termsand what it means for users..

The US Commerce Department withdrew a planned rule on artificial-intelligence chip exports on Friday, the latest backpedaling by the Trump administration in its efforts to promote secure American AI dominance.

The department had sent a draft rule, to replace a January 2025 Biden-era regulation on global access to AI chips, to other agencies for feedback late last ‌month.

A notification for ⁠the “AI ⁠Action Plan Implementation” rule was posted on the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs website on February 26, saying the ​rule was pending review, before it was pulled on Friday. “This supposed rule was always a draft and ​remains a draft,” a US official said in a statement when asked about the withdrawal. “All discussions that were previously reported were preliminary.” Last spring, the Commerce Department said it was going to ​revoke and replace the Biden-era rule with a much simpler ⁠one that ensured ‌American AI dominance, but no new regulation appeared.

The latest Trump draft ​considered requiring investments ​by foreign countries in US data centers or security guarantees as a ⁠condition for granting exports of 200,000 chips or more, according to ​a document seen by Reuters last week.

Foreign firms that wanted ​up to 100,000 chips would need to provide government-to-government assurances, the document said.

The plan departed markedly from the Biden approach, which divided the world into three tiers: allies that could receive unlimited chips; much of the world, which was subject to limited numbers; and countries of concern that were blocked from receiving the coveted chips. The Biden rule capped a four-year effort ‌by that administration to hobble China’s access to advanced chips while maintaining US leadership in AI.