President Donald Trump was slated to meet Friday with Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Jensen Huang at the White House, with their get-together coming as the chip giant has faced questions due to the big splash made by Chinese artificial-intelligence startup DeepSeek.
CEO Jensen Huang and U.S. President Donald Trump are set to meet today, according to a Bloomberg report citing an unnamed source.
Nvidia said in a statement it is "ready to work with the administration as it pursues its own approach to AI."
The Trump administration is reportedly probing whether DeepSeek bought Nvidia’s advanced computer chips through Singapore – despite US export controls blocking the sale of the powerful technology
President Donald Trump will meet with Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang at the White House on Friday as the US prepares to tee up tariffs on semiconductors, weighs the fate of a subsidy program and probes whether Chinese AI startup DeepSeek skirted export controls to obtain the chipmakers’ products.
U.S. President Donald Trump will meet with Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang at the White House on Friday, a White House official said, following reports the Trump administration is studying new ways to restrict AI chip sales to China.
The meeting comes after reports that the Trump administration is studying new ways to restrict AI chip sales to China
President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang at the White House on Friday, when they will discuss AI, chips as well as the industry's energy needs.
President Donald Trump is scheduled to meet with Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang, at the White House. The meeting is part of ongoing efforts to control AI chip exports, maintaining advanced computing within the U.
Key Takeaways Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is set to meet with President Donald Trump at the White House Friday, Bloomberg reported, after a wild week for the chipmaker's stock.Shares have lost over 12% this week after the emergence of a sophisticated,
U.S. officials are looking at the national security implications of the Chinese artificial intelligence app DeepSeek, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said on Tuesday, while President Donald Trump's crypto czar said it was possible that intellectual property theft could have been at play.