Monday, December 19, 2022
China has reportedly banned the export of chips that use the locally-designed Loongson architecture.
A story in Russian business publication ??????????? (Kommersant) cites sources at the Ministry of Digital Development as having said Beijing won't let military-grade Loongson kit cross the border to Russia, or any other nation.
Beijing's reason is that the chips have defense applications and are therefore too sensitive to be allowed to leave the Middle Kingdom.
As The Register recently reported, Loongson silicon is set to match the performance of kit from Intel and AMD. Russian chipmakers produce nothing of comparable power.
If the report is correct, it therefore matters – for a couple of reasons.
One is that early February 2022, Russia and China declared a partnership with "no limits" in the face of international pressure over the former's illegal invasion of Ukraine. If Beijing won't let local chip tech reach Moscow, clearly the partnership does have limits.
The other is that sanctions imposed on Russia since the illegal invasion of Ukraine mean it is barred from buying silicon from the likes of AMD and Intel. Vladimir Putin is fond of cyber offensives, has imposed strict online censorship at home, and needs to build more kinetic weapons to replace those destroyed in Ukraine. Just where Moscow will get the silicon to do all that – or how it will preserve the working life of its current kit – is not known. Increased efforts to secure silicon from gray or black markets seem likely.
Moscow has also seen plenty of tech workers leave the country since the invasion of Ukraine. Savvy techies have realized that global skills shortages mean they are likely to get work outside Russia, with higher salaries and not living under an authoritarian who might draft them into the military among the many perks some feel are worth pursuing.
It appears some local IT outfits have therefore turned to using remote workers in other nations.
Russia's Ministry of Digital Development on Thursday opposed a proposal to ban remote offshore workers outright, on grounds that doing so could harm local businesses' competitiveness. Russia, the Department argued, needs to compete for global talent just like any other nation as its entrepreneurs strive to build digital solutions.
The Department did, however, advise that great care is needed to assess the risk of using offshore staff to work on critical applications and infosec infrastructure. And it supports a ban on offshore workers having anything to do with government systems.
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