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China’s TechInsights ban deepens chip secrecy, raising transparency fears

China’s decision to blacklist Canadian semiconductor research firm TechInsights has stirred fresh concerns about the opacity of its technology ecosystem.

The move, which restricts Chinese entities from sharing information with the company, comes amid a widening global battle for semiconductor self-sufficiency, data control, and national security.

The ban was announced by China’s Commerce Ministry on Thursday, designating TechInsights as an “unreliable entity.”

This prevents Chinese individuals or organisations from cooperating or exchanging information with the firm, which is renowned for its detailed analysis of chip architecture and supply chains.

Beijing’s action, officially justified on national security grounds, adds another layer of secrecy to an already opaque semiconductor sector.

National security drives Beijing’s latest tech control move

TechInsights, based in Canada, is known globally for its in-depth breakdowns of semiconductor components, including Chinese-made chips.

Its reports often provide rare insight into the progress of China’s tech industry, especially when local firms avoid disclosing details about their suppliers or manufacturing partners.

The decision to blacklist TechInsights came less than a week after the firm released a detailed teardown of Huawei Technologies’ latest artificial intelligence chips.

The report found that Huawei’s “Ascend” AI chips included parts sourced from outside mainland China. The finding suggested that the company still relied on foreign technology despite its efforts to build a fully domestic chip supply chain.

Huawei did not immediately respond to questions about the report, while TechInsights did not comment outside its normal working hours.

However, the timing of Beijing’s ban suggests a growing intolerance for independent research that exposes reliance on imported components.

TechInsights’ findings challenge China’s self-reliance narrative

TechInsights’ analysis aligned with conclusions from other research groups such as SemiAnalysis. Both indicated that Huawei’s chip designs involved technology from Samsung Electronics and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC).

These companies are subject to stringent US export controls that prevent the sale of advanced chip technologies to China.

Huawei has been on a US trade blacklist since 2019, which restricts any chipmaker doing business with the United States from directly supplying it.

Despite these barriers, Chinese companies have reportedly managed to exploit regulatory loopholes and draw on chip inventories accumulated before the restrictions took effect.

The research firm’s earlier discovery that a Huawei product contained a TSMC-made chip component sparked debate about the reach of American export rules.

Its latest findings on the Ascend AI chip may intensify those concerns, showing how difficult it is to fully isolate China from the global semiconductor ecosystem.

Impact on global semiconductor transparency

The ban on TechInsights is more than a symbolic act of defiance. It potentially removes one of the few independent windows into China’s rapidly advancing chip industry.

Analysts warn that restricting such access could limit transparency, making it harder for global observers to gauge how far Chinese manufacturers have progressed under sanctions.

China’s Commerce Ministry described the decision as necessary for “safeguarding national security.” Yet it also underscores Beijing’s sensitivity about how its technological development is perceived internationally.

As Chinese chipmakers and research institutions work to reduce dependency on the West, the lack of verified information could blur the line between technological progress and political messaging.

Huawei and SMIC’s silence adds to global uncertainty

Huawei remains central to China’s semiconductor ambitions, developing chips intended to rival those of US firms like Nvidia.

Reports indicate that Huawei works closely with Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC), the country’s largest chip foundry and a competitor to TSMC.

Neither company, however, has publicly commented on their collaboration since Huawei was placed on the US trade blacklist.

By tightening control over information flows, Beijing appears to be signalling that the narrative of technological independence will be managed domestically, not defined by foreign analysts.

But the absence of third-party verification may leave investors, suppliers, and regulators uncertain about the true scale of China’s semiconductor capabilities.

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