Investing.com — CEO Jensen Huang said on Saturday that he hopes will tighten up its compliance after Taiwan authorities detained three persons for forging documents while trying to export AI chips to China.
“We insist our partners are compliant. We hope that they will enhance and improve their regulation compliance and prevent that from happening in the future,” Huang said as he addressed the media after landing in Taipei.
The three individuals are alleged to have submitted false statements regarding AI servers produced by Super Micro Computer in order to export them to China, Hong Kong, and Macau in breach of U.S. trade regulations. The company integrates AI chips from firms such as Nvidia into server systems deployed in data centers for training and operating AI models including ChatGPT. The U.S. government has barred the sale of such hardware to China since 2022.
With Nvidia GTC Taipei taking place next week, the company launch of Vera Rubin in Q3 is the next big event to look forward to.
Designed for agentic AI, reasoning and long-context workloads, it enables AI factories to scale intelligence inside the rack and across the data center with secure, continuously available deployment.
“Vera Rubin is going to be the most successful generation so far,” Jensen reiterated on Saturday, noting that in the past the company had only one or two frontier AI model companies working with the company, but now they have every such company working with them. He emphasized that this is set to be the largest and fastest launch by the company.
“Each one of the vera rubin systems consists of almost 2M parts and includes around 150 diff ecosystem partners here in Taiwan to build it.”
He added that China is a very important market for the company and that his forecast of a $2 billion market for CPUs includes the country, despite current tensions with the U.S.

