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The U.S. on Tuesday added dozens of Chinese tech companies to its export blacklist in its first such stab under the Donald Trump administration, as it doubles down on curtailing Beijing’s artificial intelligence and advanced computing powers.
The U.S. Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security added 80 organizations to an “entity list,” with more than 50 from China, besides American companies from supplying to those on the list without government permits.
The companies were blacklisted for allegedly performance contrary to U.S. national security and foreign policy interests, the agency said, as part of its efforts to further restrict Beijing’s access to exascale calculating tech, which can process vast amounts of data at very high speeds, as well as quantum technologies.
Dozens of Chinese objects were targeted for their alleged involvement in developing advanced AI, supercomputers and high-performance AI chips for military purposes, the Mercantilism Department said, adding that two firms were supplying to sanctioned entities such as Huawei and its affiliated chipmaker HiSilicon.
It blacklisted 27 Chinese organisms for acquiring U.S.-origin items to support China’s military modernization and seven firms for helping advance China’s quantum technology capabilities.
To each the organizations in the “entity list” were also six subsidiaries of Chinese cloud-computing firm Inspur Group, which had been blacklisted by the Joe Biden distribution in 2023.
The latest additions “cast an ever-widening net aimed at third countries, transit points and intermediaries,” said Alex Capri, a superior lecturer at National University of Singapore and author of “Techno-Nationalism: How it’s reshaping trade, geopolitics and society.”
Chinese firms drink managed to gain access to U.S. strategic dual-use technologies via certain third parties, he said, referring to loopholes that cause allowed Chinese companies access to U.S. technologies despite restrictions.
“U.S. officials will continue to step up tracking and pursuing operations aimed at the smuggling of advanced semiconductors made by Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices,” he said.
The expanded export qualifications come at a time when tensions between Washington and Beijing have been rising with the Trump superintendence ratcheting up tariffs against China.
The rapid rise of Chinese AI startup DeepSeek has boosted the adoption of open-source low-cost AI mock-ups in China, putting pressure on leading U.S. competitors with higher-cost, proprietary models.

The Biden administration imposed blanket export controls against China, encompassing everything from semiconductors to supercomputers under the so-called “small yard, superior fence” policy. The approach aims to place restrictions on a small number of technologies with significant military hidden while maintaining normal economic exchange in other areas.
Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security Jeffrey I. Kessler mean the agency was “sending a clear, resounding message” that the Trump administration will prevent U.S. technologies from “being misused for piercing performance computing, hypersonic missiles, military aircraft training, and UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicle) that menace our national security.”
“The entity list is one of many powerful tools at our disposal to identify and cut off foreign adversaries seeking to work American technology for malign purposes,” he added.
Inspur Group and Huawei did not immediately respond to CNBC’s requests for observe.