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Tom’s Hardware
Tom’s Hardware
Technology
Anton Shilov

Baidu admits US sanctions on Nvidia and AMD GPUs mean it might not have access to leading-edge GPUs again

Baidu.

Baidu recently told its investors that it would not be able to procure leading-edge GPUs for AI applications in the future due to U.S. export restrictions, reports The Register. However, the company believes its advanced software stack will ensure its competitive position despite using less sophisticated processors.

"In the long run, we may not have access to the most cutting-edge GPU," said Robin Li, chief executive of Baidu, at the company's earnings call this week (via SeekingAlpha). "But with the most efficient homegrown software stack, […] the user experience will not be compromised."

Baidu has not been significantly impacted by the U.S. export restrictions on high-performance AI GPUs and other processors, so it will not be impacted in the short term, according to chief executive Robin Li. The company says its existing reserves of Nvidia's GPUs and current procurement capabilities are sufficient to power its existing AI services, AI-native applications, and at least some future projects. This includes support for ERNIE, Baidu's answer to ChatGPT, which is touted as China's most powerful foundation model.

Baidu has traditionally used Nvidia's high-performance GPUs for training and inferencing of its AI models. Several years ago, the company introduced its own Kunlun II chip, which could rival Nvidia's A100 in AI workloads. However, whether it currently powers a significant portion of the company's services is unclear. The company also reportedly adopted Huawei's Ascend 910-series processors late last year to reduce its reliance on Nvidia.

Now that Baidu cannot procure Nvidia's A100 and H100 processors and will not have access to Nvidia's B100 GPUs when they are released this year, it will have to rely on processors developed and made in China, which are not as fast as those from Nvidia, of course. This is where the company pins a lot of hope on its software stack and innovation.

"There is ample room for innovation in the application layer, the model layer and the framework layer," said Li. "Our end-to-end self developed four-layer AI architecture along with our strong R&D team will support us in using less advanced chips for efficient model training and inferencing. This provides Baidu with a unique competitive advantage over our domestic peers."

Baidu claims to have China's most cost-efficient AI infrastructure for model training and inferencing. This efficiency, coupled with the company's innovative AI architecture, positions Baidu favorably against its domestic competitors. All Chinese tech companies face similar challenges with access to Nvidia's highest-end products. In contrast, international cloud services like AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud can buy tons of Nvidia processors (literally). To that end, how the shortage impacts Baidu and its domestic peers against global competitors remains to be seen.

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